Crime
Pembroke motorist fined after missing drug assessment
A 27-year-old man told magistrates the appointment had “completely gone out of my mind”
A PEMBROKE motorist has been fined after failing to attend an initial drug assessment following a positive test for a class A drug.
Bradley Bostock, 27, was told to attend the assessment centre in Haverfordwest on December 16, 2025, but failed to do so.
His non-attendance led to his appearance before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday (Jun 23), where he pleaded guilty.
“In all honesty, it completely went out of my mind,” Bostock told the bench.
“I didn’t get out of the cell until three o’clock in the morning, and there was so much going on, I simply forgot. But I’m more than willing to go.”
Bostock, of Corston Cottages, Axton Hill, Pembroke, was fined £80 and ordered to pay £85 court costs and a £32 surcharge.
Crime
Milford man threatened to smash parents’ windows, court hears
A MILFORD HAVEN man who repeatedly asked his parents for alcohol and money has admitted threatening to damage their home.
Christopher Sizer, 38, threatened to smash windows and kick in doors at his parents’ property in Shakespeare Avenue, Milford Haven, on March 3.
Haverfordwest magistrates heard there had been long-standing issues between Sizer and his parents.
“There have been long-standing issues between the defendant and his parents, and he’s constantly asking them for money,” said Crown Prosecutor Sian Vaughan.
“If they don’t give it, then he makes threats. But this is impacting them significantly. It just can’t go on.”
Ms Vaughan said Sizer had arrived at the property initially asking for alcohol.
“He had friends with him and then asked them for pizza, but this was a drain on their finances,” she said.
“It was at this point that he threatened to damage their property with a hammer that was readily available, and naturally they were concerned about that.”
The court was told Sizer’s mother had provided a victim impact statement, saying she and her husband could no longer cope with his behaviour.
“If we don’t give him what he wants, he threatens to kill himself, and if we have a night away he’ll phone me constantly, asking for money,” she said.
“My husband has had to get a night job to get extra money and we’ve also had to take out a loan. We can’t cope with his behaviour any more.”
Sizer, of Precelly Place, Milford Haven, pleaded guilty to making threats to damage or destroy property.
Magistrates requested a pre-sentence report from the probation service before sentencing and adjourned the case until July 14.
Sizer was released on conditional bail. He must not enter his parents’ property in Shakespeare Avenue, must not enter the Ty Hotel in Milford Haven, and must not contact his parents by any means, either directly or indirectly.
Crime
Argument outside Tenby hotel ends in conditional discharge
A MARRIED woman who threw her shoes and a flower pot at her husband during an argument outside a Tenby hotel has been given a conditional discharge.
Haverfordwest magistrates heard that Kerry Mayne, 35, had been out for a meal with family friends on May 9 and had drunk wine before meeting her husband, Ryan Mayne, outside the Tenby House Hotel.
Her solicitor, Aled Owen, said Mr Mayne had also been drinking after a night out in Saundersfoot.
Mr Owen told the court that Mr Mayne runs a security firm involved in training door staff and recognised two men working on the door at the premises.
“He recognised two men who were on duty at the pub as people he had trained,” said Mr Owen.
“This was when he grabbed the defendant from behind and told them to take her out because she was too drunk.
“Maybe this was his way of showing off to his past pupils who were at the door.”
Prosecutor Sian Vaughan said Mayne then “saw red”.
“She took offence at what he’d done and took her shoes off to throw them at her husband, but fortunately they did not make contact,” she said.
“She then reached up to a pot of flowers that had been placed on the windowsill and threw them at Ryan Mayne.”
Mayne, of Trem y Coleg, Carmarthen, pleaded guilty to assault by beating and causing £35 worth of criminal damage to a plant pot owned by the Tenby House Hotel.
After viewing CCTV footage of the incident, magistrates sentenced her to a 12-month conditional discharge.
She must also pay £85 prosecution costs and a £26 surcharge.
Crime
Domestic abuse specialists to join Dyfed-Powys 999 control room
New scheme aims to improve emergency response and safeguarding for victims across west Wales
A LAW introduced after a woman and her mother were murdered despite repeated 999 calls is to be rolled out in the Dyfed-Powys Police control room.
Domestic abuse specialists will be placed alongside emergency call handlers under the second phase of ‘Raneem’s Law’, giving officers and control room staff real-time advice when victims call for help.
The scheme is named after Raneem Oudeh and her mother Khaola Saleem, who were murdered in Birmingham in August 2018 by Raneem’s former husband after police failed to respond properly to repeated emergency calls.
Dyfed-Powys Police and North Wales Police are among twelve additional forces across England and Wales selected to join the scheme, bringing the total number taking part to seventeen.

For west Wales, the move means callers from Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion and Powys should have domestic abuse risks assessed at the first point of contact, rather than later in the process.
The specialists will help identify high-risk cases, advise call handlers and responding officers, review risk assessments and ensure victims are referred quickly to specialist support services.
Early reports from forces already using the scheme suggest it has improved confidence among call handlers and officers, helped identify high-risk domestic abuse cases sooner, and led to faster safeguarding action.
The UK Government says the expansion comes six months after the launch of its Violence Against Women and Girls Strategy, which aims to halve violence against women and girls within a decade.
Minister for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women and Girls, Natalie Fleet, said: “Last year, one in eight women experienced domestic abuse, sexual assault, or stalking. No society that tolerates this level of violence can claim to be safe for women.
“That’s why we are rolling out the pioneering ‘Raneem’s Law’ to forces in Wales because every victim, no matter where they live, should be able to rely on a system that truly supports them.
“But we will not stop there. We will deploy the full power of the state to make this country safe for women and girls.”
Nour Norris, lead campaigner and the aunt and sister of Raneem Oudeh and Khaola Saleem, said: “When my sister Khaola and my niece Raneem called for help, they should have been heard, understood and protected. Instead, our family lost two beautiful lives in circumstances that should never have happened.
“Every step forward for ‘Raneem’s Law’ is deeply emotional for me because it comes from unimaginable pain and loss.
“‘Raneem’s Law’ is more than a policy. It is a legacy built on love for my sister and niece and on the determination that their voices, and the voices of all victims of domestic abuse, are never ignored again.”
Secretary of State for Wales Jo Stevens said: “The UK Government is working to make our communities safer and it is vital that we reduce violence against women and girls to achieve this goal.
“We know that a specialist focus on preventing domestic abuse works, and I am pleased that this new approach is going to be rolled out across two of our Welsh police force areas.
“Victims of appalling abuse across North Wales and Dyfed-Powys will now have the greater protection they deserve.”
The Government has committed to rolling out ‘Raneem’s Law’ across every police force in England and Wales by 2029.
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