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Crime

Missed chances to help boxer before tragic death after prison release

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REPORT CRITICAL OF PROBATION SERVICE FOLLOWING DEATH OF FORMER OLYMPIC HOPEFUL

MULTIPLE opportunities were missed to support a former Welsh boxing champion from Pembrokeshire before his death just days after release from prison, a report has found.

Renny Edwards, a former Welsh ABA featherweight champion from Haverfordwest, died aged 56 in April 2024. A post-mortem revealed the cause of death was chronic alcohol misuse and epilepsy.

Mr Edwards had been remanded to HMP Swansea on December 30, 2023, and was sentenced to 24 weeks in prison for common assault and battery in January last year.

Renny Edwards, from Pembroke ABC, knocks down Michael Lyons during a featherweight fight in Cardiff in 1988 (Mirrorpix)

A report by the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman found that upon arrival in custody, Mr Edwards disclosed heavy alcohol use and a diagnosis of epilepsy. He was prescribed medication but declined help from the substance misuse team, telling staff he knew how to access support if needed.

He was released on licence on March 4, 2024, but was recalled to prison just eight days later for breaching his conditions. He was released again on April 2, but was recalled the following day after missing a probation appointment.

On both occasions, Mr Edwards declined support from prison-based substance misuse services. However, after the first recall, he did agree to be referred to the community drug and alcohol service.

Following his final release on April 15, probation staff noted Mr Edwards appeared “somewhat uncoordinated” during an induction appointment.

The next day, April 16, he turned up at the probation office without an appointment. Staff said he appeared intoxicated and had wet himself. He was not permitted to enter the building.

Despite these concerns, there was no evidence that he was referred to alcohol support services or that a home visit was arranged.

Mr Edwards failed to attend an appointment on April 22. On April 25, his mother contacted probation officers to report him missing. Later that day, he was found dead.

The ombudsman, Adrian Usher, said that Mr Edwards’ early release in March had delayed plans to refer him to community alcohol services. He added that after the April 15 appointment, probation staff recognised the need for referral but did not follow through.

Mr Usher said: “There is no evidence that this was followed up or that Mr Edwards was referred to the community alcohol service at this point.”

He concluded that while it is not certain an appointment would have been arranged before Mr Edwards’ death, there were several missed opportunities for intervention.

The ombudsman recommended that: “The Head of Probation Delivery Unit for Dyfed-Powys should ensure that when a risk is identified, appropriate referrals are promptly completed to the relevant community services.”

 

Crime

Man spared jail after admitting child abuse image offences

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Police seized devices after intelligence linked Pembrokeshire address to illegal cloud storage accounts

A 23-YEAR-OLD Pembrokeshire man has avoided immediate custody after admitting making and possessing indecent images of children, including extreme bestiality material.

Ryan Beale, aged 23, appeared at Swansea Crown Court for sentencing this week.

At his first hearing, before magistrates on December 31, he entered guilty pleas and being granted conditional bail.

The court heard the case followed an intelligence-led police investigation linking Beale to a Dropbox account suspected of storing illegal material. Officers executed a warrant at his home on December 18.

During his arrest, Beale told officers: “I don’t use Dropbox,” claiming his email and Google accounts had been compromised.

However, police seized his mobile phone and computer equipment. A forensic examination found the email address connected to the Dropbox account stored on his device. Although the account had also been accessed from overseas locations, including Nigeria, investigators were satisfied it was controlled by Beale and linked to a larger cloud storage account containing significant volumes of illegal content.

Officers discovered 120 Category A images, 36 Category B images and 29 Category C images.

Category A represents the most serious level of abuse.

The material included extreme and disturbing bestiality content. Further Category C images were also located within the Dropbox account.

Two identified victims depicted in the images were girls aged nine and eleven.

Beale initially denied the allegations but later admitted the offences.

Passing sentence, at Swansea Crown Court on Tuesday (Feb 3) the His Honour Geraint Walters said: “This was not an innocent pastime. Every time an adult views that image, a child is still being abused.”

He added that an early guilty plea had spared Beale immediate custody but warned the offences would have lifelong consequences.

“The public have no time for anybody doing this,” the judge said. “If you’re doing this, the police will find out. They didn’t knock on your door randomly — they knew what they were looking for.”

Beale was sentenced to eight months’ imprisonment, suspended for two years. He must complete 20 days of rehabilitation activity and pay £300 in prosecution costs.

The court also imposed a Sexual Harm Prevention Order, ordered the forfeiture and destruction of his electronic devices, and placed him on the Sex Offenders Register for ten years.

“If you keep yourself out of trouble, you won’t have to serve that custodial sentence,” the judge told him.

 

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Crime

Hakin man’s appeal delayed again as Crown Court seeks guidance on insurance law

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Judge gives CPS more time to review latest road traffic law guidance before case returns in March

A HAKIN man’s appeal against a conviction for driving without insurance has been delayed after a judge granted prosecutors additional time to review updated legal guidance.

Seventy-six-year-old Niall Taylor, of Haven Drive, appeared at Swansea Crown Court on Tuesday (Jan 13) for a mention hearing in his case.

Taylor has accepted the finding that he drove otherwise than in accordance with a licence, but is challenging the separate conviction for using a vehicle without insurance.

The case relates to an incident on January 18, 2023, when he drove a Vauxhall Zafira along Hammond Avenue, Haverfordwest.

The matter has already followed an unusual procedural history. Taylor initially pleaded not guilty in the magistrates’ court but later changed his plea during the original trial. Questions were subsequently raised over whether that plea had been “equivocal”, leading the case to be reopened under Section 142 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980 and reheard in full.

Following a trial of the facts, magistrates found him guilty and imposed sentence in December. Taylor has since lodged an appeal focused solely on the insurance offence.

During Tuesday’s hearing, His Honour Judge Walters granted the Crown Prosecution Service 28 days to review Wilkinson’s Road Traffic Offences (32nd Edition), the leading legal reference text used by courts in motoring cases.

Addressing the court, the judge said the matter may still require further consideration, adding: “The court still might want to reconsider the sentence even if the insurance company is right. It does look as if different insurance companies do things in different ways.”

He added: “It is not in fact void, but it is voidable.”

Taylor maintains that a valid insurance policy was in force at the time of driving and argues that, in law, third-party cover cannot simply be cancelled because of an administrative licensing issue.

The appeal is due to return to Swansea Crown Court on March 27, when further legal argument is expected.

 

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Crime

Pembroke Dock woman admits breaching community order

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Magistrates revoke sentence after missed appointments

A PEMBROKE DOCK woman has admitted breaching the terms of a community order.

Shannon Charge, aged 30, of Pater Court, appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Monday (Feb 2).

She admitted failing to attend a scheduled probation appointment and a drug dependency appointment.

Magistrates revoked the existing community order and ordered her to pay £60 in court costs.

The court heard the order related to earlier offences, for which she had been made subject to rehabilitation and drug treatment requirements. A further review hearing is listed for March 2.

 

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