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SHAME SHAME


UNINSURED BRADFORD PH DRIVER CHARGED AFTER HE RAN OVER AND KILLED YOUNG BOY


A man has been charged after running over and killing a seven- year-old boy in Bradford. ExaminerLive reports that Malakye Hall died when he was hit by a private hire vehicle in Manchester Road, Bradford, on August 11, 2020.


Mohsin Hussain, 31, from Manningham, Bradford, has now been charged with causing death by uninsured driver. He has been


bailed to appear at Bradford Magistrates Court on Friday September 9. Malakye was crossing Manchester Road by himself when he was struck by a Toyota Auris Estate PHV at around 10pm on the tragic night. Malakye’s mum Wendy Hall, 33, was jailed after leaving him in their house alone, which had no electricity or gas, while she went


to see her partner.


Hall had left her mobile phone with Malakye to play on while she was away, but he got out of the house shortly after she left. Hall pleaded guilty to neglect and was jailed for three years. Witnesses tried to save Malakye’s life by giving him CPR until paramedics arrived but he died a short time later in Bradford Royal Infirmary.


22 MONTHS’ JAIL FOR DRUG DEALING DUNDEE CABBIE WHO HAD HAUL OF ILLEGAL WEAPONRY


A taxi driver caught with thousands of pounds worth of class-A drugs and firearms in his Dundee home who claimed he had been “set-up” has been jailed. According to The Courier, Scott Cuthill will spend 22 months behind bars after admitting being a drug dealer and owning the weapons earlier this year. The 57-year-old had been warned at an earlier hearing he faced a custodial sentence, which was handed down by Sheriff Jillian Martin-Brown at Dundee Sheriff Court.


Sending him down, she said: “A custodial sentence is to be expected in firearms cases.” Police visited Cuthill’s old home in Caldrum Street on August 11 2019 due to an unrelated incident. Both Cuthill and his partner of 15 years, from whom he had recently split, were taken to police HQ at West Bell Street.


56


At that stage, no criminality was est- ablished by officers but Cuthill’s part- ner,


the


registered tenant provided the keys to the property for police to search. They returned to the house and found a safe, which was locked with a digital keypad, and a secured moneybox within. They returned to the station and asked Cuthill for the code, which he refused to provide. He told police: “This is a set-up, this is a set-up.” Police eventually forced entry to the safe and found a haul of drug paraphernalia and illegal items including a can of PAVA spray labelled “American-style Nato super-paralysing”


A stun gun, from which sparks could be both seen and heard by officers was also recovered. Both of these items are illegal in the UK unless the owners hold a f irearms licence. Police also discovered tubs and snap-bags full of amphetamines and methamphetamines, which were covered in Cuthill’s DNA. In total, 184.17 grammes of drugs were seized, along with a set of weighing scales. Police valued this haul as being worth between £3,680 and £5,520 and noted from evidence they uncovered, Cuthill was selling single-gramme deals for £20. Related messages on his phone dated back to November 2017. Cuthill admitted being concerned in the supply of both drugs for two years. Police also seized £3,400 in cash f rom the safe and cashbox as well as a further £795.68 from Cuthill.


SEPTEMBER 2022 PHTM


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