Crime
Haverfordwest man admits specimen and insurance offences
A HAVERFORDWEST man has admitted failing to provide a specimen and driving without insurance, but denies drink-driving and careless driving allegations.
Jack Mills, 26, of Flat 11, Glebe House, Winch Lane, Haverfordwest, appeared before Llanelli Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday (Jul 8).
The court heard that Mills admitted failing to provide a breath specimen for analysis at Cardigan on June 17, after being suspected of having driven a vehicle. He also admitted failing or refusing to provide a non-intimate sample for a Class A drug test while in police detention on the same date.
Mills also pleaded guilty to using a Ford Focus without third-party insurance at Bastleford, Rosemarket, on July 7.
He further indicated a guilty plea to fraudulently using a registration mark. The charge states that the Ford Focus’s correct registration was WL03 AHF, but it was being driven while displaying plates bearing the index T619 CKV.
However, Mills denied driving while over the alcohol limit at Rosemarket on July 7. The charge alleges he drove the Ford Focus on Bastleford, Rosemarket, with 44 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath.
He also denied driving without due care and attention on the same road and date.
Mills was made subject to an interim disqualification and was remanded on unconditional bail.
He is due to appear before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on September 7 for a two-hour trial.
Crime
Man taken to hospital after incident on Marble Hall Road
Police closed part of the road while paramedics treated an injured man at the scene
A MAN was taken to hospital after an incident on Marble Hall Road, Milford Haven, on Wednesday evening.
Police and paramedics attended the scene after reports that a man had been injured during an altercation.
A section of the road was closed while emergency services dealt with the incident, with a police road closure sign placed nearby.
The injured man, believed to be in his 30s, was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to hospital for further assessment.
An eyewitness who stopped to help said the man had fallen backwards and struck his head on the road.
She said: “I was holding a towel to the back of his head and trying to keep him comfortable while I had the ambulance on the phone.
“He had been punched by another man and went straight down like an ironing board. He hit the back of his head on the road.”
Residents living nearby also came out to assist before emergency services arrived.
Police attended the scene and further details, including whether any arrests have been made, are awaited.
Picture caption: Police closed part of Marble Hall Road while emergency services attended the incident.
Crime
Young people urged to have their say on crime and policing in Dyfed-Powys
YOUNG people across the Dyfed-Powys area are being encouraged to share their views on crime, safety and policing through a new survey launched by the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner’s Youth Ambassadors.
The survey is open to people aged 14 to 25 living in the Dyfed-Powys policing area and has been designed by the Youth Ambassadors as part of their new Future Youth Project.
It aims to capture the experiences, opinions and concerns of young people, helping to ensure their voices are heard in future decision-making, services and policing priorities.
The findings will be used to shape work aimed at better supporting young people and tackling the issues that matter most to them.
Police and Crime Commissioner Dafydd Llywelyn said: “Your opinion really does matter.
“I encourage all young people to take part in this survey. Young people’s feedback is essential in helping my Youth Ambassadors, my Office and Dyfed-Powys Police gather the opinions and concerns of our young people living in our communities.
“Let’s continue to work together to keep Dyfed-Powys safe for young people.”
The initiative places young people at the centre of the process and highlights the importance of youth voice in influencing positive change within communities.
Participants will also have the chance to enter a prize draw to win a Swansea City AFC shirt signed by Gonçalo Franco. The winner will be announced in September.
The survey is quick to complete and closes on September 25, 2026.
It can be completed here: https://forms.office.com/e/Fdf1aLyqZX?origin=lprLink
Image: Martin Cavaney
Crime
Welsh-born woman Ruth Ellis granted pardon 71 years after execution
Last woman hanged in Britain receives conditional pardon after Government recognises domestic abuse and “profound injustice” of her death sentence
RUTH ELLIS , the last woman to be hanged in Britain, has been granted a conditional posthumous pardon more than 70 years after her execution.
Ellis was 28 when she was hanged at Holloway Prison in July 1955 after being convicted of murdering David Blakely, a racing driver with whom she had been in a violent and abusive relationship.
The pardon was granted by The King following advice from Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary David Lammy. It follows an application made on behalf of four of Ellis’s grandchildren.
The Government said the case involved exceptional circumstances, including evidence of domestic abuse and coercive and controlling behaviour which would be understood very differently by the courts today.
Ellis shot Blakely on April 10, 1955. She was convicted of murder and executed on July 13 that year. No appeal was lodged and no reprieve was granted.
The conditional pardon does not overturn her conviction. Instead, it recognises that the death sentence itself was unjust, replacing it in legal effect with a sentence of life imprisonment.
Mr Lammy said: “We cannot change what happened seventy years ago. But we can recognise that this was an exceptional case. Today’s conditional pardon is an act of mercy. We hope it brings some measure of peace to Ruth’s family.”
Matrix Chambers, whose lawyers acted on the application, said Ellis had suffered “terrible abuse” by Blakely which affected her mental state and culpability, and that the full circumstances of the killing were not properly investigated or explored at trial.
The chambers said the case prompted widespread public condemnation at the time and helped accelerate the eventual abolition of capital punishment in Britain.
Ellis’s granddaughter Laura Enston said the pardon could not undo what happened, but formally acknowledged that Ellis should not have been executed and that the justice system had failed her.
The case has long been seen as one of the most controversial executions in modern British history, not only because Ellis was the last woman to be hanged, but because later accounts revealed the extent of the abuse she had suffered before the killing.
Under modern law, the Government said, Ellis may have been able to argue partial defences including loss of control or diminished responsibility. Had those arguments succeeded, her conviction could have been reduced from murder to manslaughter.
Lawyers Alex Bailin KC and Jessica Jones, of Matrix Chambers, were instructed by Mishcon de Reya on the application and acted pro bono.
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