News
Haverfordwest men jailed for repeatedly stamping on man’s head until he lost consciousness
TWO Haverfordwest men have been jailed by Swansea Crown Court for stamping and repeatedly kicking a man’s head until he lost consciousness.
Jedd Hitchings, 25, and Gareth Roberts, 32, turned on Graham Nicholas soon after he had returned to his flat on the Three Meadows estate in Haverfordwest.
Witnesses described how they saw Mr Hitchings knock Mr Nicholas to the ground before both he and Roberts began stamping and kicking his head with force. Their violent assault continued for around 30 seconds.
“It looked as if he had been hit with a cricket bat,” his friend, Mr Wayne John, told police officers following the attack.
“His nose was splattered all over his face. It breaks my heart to think what they did to him. He was a good man and didn’t deserve any of this.”
The attack took place on the evening of December 14, 2021, after Mr Nicholas walked home to Three Meadows, accompanied by Mr John with whom he’d spent the afternoon drinking alcohol. Mr Nicholas carried on walking towards his flat while Mr John held back with his dog.
When Mr Nicholas reached his flat, he heard a loud noise coming from the flat above. As he requested the occupier to turn the noise down, a group of people proceeded to walk down the stairs.
“The next thing he remembers was being helped into a police van after the assault,” the counsel for the Crown told Swansea Crown Court this morning (Friday).
When his friend, Mr John, reached Three Meadows he saw Mr Nicholas being punched to the head by Hitchings, causing him to fall to the floor.
A neighbour became aware of the incident after being disturbed by men ‘shouting aggressively’.
“I looked out and saw two men kicking and stamping on a man in the driveway,” confirmed the neighbour in a police statement. “This carried on for around 30 seconds with some force and Mr Nicholas was bleeding heavily from the face.”
When police arrived and discovered the extent of Mr Nicholas’ injuries, they called an ambulance but, upon being told that it would take a considerable length of time to arrive, they decided to drive the complainant to the hospital in their van.
His injuries included a broken nose and lacerations to the back of his head, left nostril and upper lip.
At the time of the attack Mr Nicholas was recovering from a heart attack which he had suffered five months previously.
“I can’t breathe through my left nostril and I now have a deformity to my top lip which can’t be rectified,” he said in a victim impact statement.
“I’m going to have to live with this for the rest of my life. My injuries have affected my appearance and this has a knock-on effect on my confidence.
“All I did that night was knock on my neighbour’s door to ask her to keep the noise down.
“Life is never going to be the same for me again.”
Both defendants, of no fixed abode, pleaded guilty to charges of unlawful wounding while Hitchings admitted an additional charge of perverting the course of justice.
This was in relation to him claiming that the attack had been committed by Mr Wayne John. As a result, Mr John was arrested and kept in police custody for 22 hours,
“I was worried and stressed,” Mr John said in a victim impact statement.
“My daughter was due to get married a few days later, and I didn’t know if I would be able to attend.”
Jedd Hitchings, was sentenced to 27 months in prison while Roberts will serve 19 months in custody.
Half of these sentences will be served in prison with the remainder spent on licence.
Both defendants were placed on a five year restraining order preventing them from approaching or contacting Mr Graham Nicholas.
Community
Pembrokeshire mourns Major Juno
Dyfed-bred mare rose from a farm in Eglwyswrw to national ceremonial fame and became a trailblazer for the Household Cavalry
TRIBUTES have been paid across Pembrokeshire following the death of Major Juno, the Dyfed-bred Shire horse whose journey from a working farm in Eglwyswrw to the centre of Britain’s ceremonial life made her a source of enormous local pride.
Known at home as Willa Rose, she was bred at Dyfed Shire Horse Farm, where her size, strength and calm temperament quickly marked her out as something special. Born on May 10, 2013, she was part of the fourth generation of the Dyfed bloodline and would go on to become one of the farm’s most celebrated horses.

In 2021, she was bought by the Household Cavalry and sent to London, where she underwent two years of specialist training before being officially named Juno in 2023.
Her rise was historic. Major Juno became the first mare to pass out onto parade as a Household Cavalry drum horse, placing both horse and farm in the national spotlight. The achievement shone a light on Pembrokeshire and on the work of breeders in rural west Wales, with many locally seeing her success as something truly extraordinary.
She went on to appear in three consecutive Trooping the Colour parades, cementing her place among the most notable horses ever bred at the farm. For local people, she was far more than a ceremonial animal. She was living proof that a horse raised in Pembrokeshire could reach the very highest level of national service.

Major Juno came from a remarkable line. Her uncle Celt went on to serve in London as Major Mercury after joining the Household Cavalry in 2008, while another Dyfed horse, Ed, later became Major Apollo. In 2023, Apollo and Juno paraded together at Trooping the Colour, an extraordinary moment for the family behind Dyfed Shire Horse Farm and a measure of the farm’s unique reputation for producing elite ceremonial horses.

Despite her national fame, Juno never lost her connection to Pembrokeshire. She returned to the farm for public visits, drawing crowds of admirers eager to see the Dyfed-bred mare whose reputation had spread far beyond the county.
Her death, after a short illness, has prompted an outpouring of sadness from those who followed her story from the beginning. Dyfed Shire Horse Farm paid tribute to her as “our Rose”, while the family has asked for her to be returned to Pembrokeshire to be laid to rest alongside Major Mercury.

Among those paying tribute was county councillor Huw Carnhuan Murphy, who wrote: “Your journey is done, proud to have been there on the day it all began on May 10th, 2013 with Nikki Murphy & Anna Raymond.”
From the fields of north Pembrokeshire to Horse Guards Parade, Major Juno carried the county with her. In death, as in life, she remains a symbol of the care, quality and quiet ambition that took a Welsh-bred mare to the very heart of national tradition.

News
Welsh politicians call for pension fund divestment over Israel links
Cross-party Senedd members and councillors say Welsh public money must not be invested in firms linked to alleged war crimes and apartheid
POLITICIANS from across Wales have called for local government pension funds to stop investing in companies they say are complicit in Israel’s actions against Palestinians.
In a cross-party letter coordinated by Palestine Solidarity Campaign Cymru, Senedd members and councillors from Plaid Cymru, the Greens, Labour and the Liberal Democrats urged the Wales Pensions Partnership to end investments they describe as supporting “genocide and apartheid”.
The Wales Pensions Partnership manages Welsh local government pension funds worth an estimated £26 billion.
In their letter, the politicians said ensuring public investments “are not contributing to grave violations of international law must be an urgent priority”.
The intervention comes as the Wales Pensions Partnership develops an Exclusion Framework, which campaigners say is intended to prevent investments that conflict with climate, human rights and international law commitments.
However, those behind the letter argue that the framework risks falling short of what they describe as a clear democratic mandate from councils across Wales.
According to PSC Cymru, many councils have already passed motions calling for divestment from companies alleged to be complicit in war crimes, apartheid and other breaches of international law. The group says 11 councils in Wales — half of all councils in the country — have now backed such motions.
Research cited by the campaign claims that Local Government Pension Scheme funds in Wales have more than £1.1 billion invested in companies said to be linked to Israel’s actions against Palestinians.
As one example, the campaign says Rhondda Cynon Taf Pension Fund has invested more than £12 million in BAE Systems, which it describes as an arms manufacturer making parts for fighter jets used by Israel in Gaza.
The letter calls on the Wales Pensions Partnership to ensure its Exclusion Framework explicitly excludes all companies said to be enabling grave violations of international law by Israel, and to produce a clear, time-bound plan for divestment.
Bethan Sayed, co-chair of PSC Cymru, said: “Today’s letter sends an unmistakable message: Welsh politicians from across the political spectrum will not allow public money to fund genocide and apartheid.
“The Wales Pension Partnership manages £26 billion on behalf of Welsh workers and communities — not a single penny of it should be profiting from the massacre of Palestinian men, women and children.
“Six out of seven people in Wales support divestment. Eleven councils have passed motions. The democratic mandate could not be clearer. The WPP must act — and it must act now.”
PSC Cymru said the letter reflected growing pressure across Wales for public bodies to review investments linked to the conflict.
Crime
Alleged pay TV fraud case due before Haverfordwest magistrates
Milford Haven man faces three Fraud Act charges linked to apps, electronic data and adapted Amazon Fire TV sticks
A MILFORD HAVEN man is due to appear before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday (Apr 21) charged with three offences under the Fraud Act 2006.
Michael David Barrow, 48, of Priory Road, Milford Haven, is listed to appear before magistrates in connection with allegations relating to software and devices said to have enabled unlawful access to pay television content.
According to the court list, it is alleged that between October 19, 2019 and February 22, 2024, at Haverfordwest and elsewhere in Pembrokeshire, Barrow made applications, known as apps, and/or other electronic data which enabled access to pay television content without appropriate payment being made to those entitled to it.
He is further accused of supplying applications, apps and/or other electronic data intended to be used to commit, or assist in the commission of, fraud.
A third charge alleges that he supplied Amazon Fire TV Sticks which, when adapted, enabled access to pay television content without appropriate payment being made to the rights holders, intending them to be used to commit, or assist in the commission of, fraud.
All three charges are brought under Section 7 of the Fraud Act 2006.
-
Business6 days agoA proper Pembroke local: Inside the warm welcome of The Old Cross Saws Inn
-
Business4 days agoMilford Haven dry dock pitched as home for giant £480m superyacht yard
-
Community6 days agoDoorstep warning issued after reports of suspicious callers in Pembrokeshire
-
Crime6 days agoRomino’s licence revoked after illegal workers found and fire risks exposed
-
Politics5 days agoWelsh Lib Dems promise childcare boost, social care reform in manifesto launch
-
News5 days agoHaverfordwest County AFC escapes winding-up order but ordered to pay costs
-
News5 days agoLabour split over Brawdy defence project as Eluned Morgan calls for project halt
-
Crime7 days agoBritish Transport Police widens Tenby stabbing inquiry as five arrested









