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Thirty jobs created at new retro restaurant Ed's Easy Diner in Derby's Westfield Centre

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A RETRO American diner has reported a brisk trade after opening in the Westfield Derby shopping centre.

Ed's Easy Diner has opened on level one of the shopping centre, creating about 30 jobs.

It is a 1950s-inspired restaurant, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner including hamburgers, hot dogs, pancakes and milk shakes.

The 80-cover venue also features juke boxes where diners can choose their own retro songs.

Thirty jobs created at new retro restaurant Ed's Easy Diner in Derby's Westfield Centre


All I want for Christmas is....to avoid giving my family food poisoning! Top tips on cooking Christmas dinner

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PREPARING a meal at Christmas can be daunting - how long do you leave the turkey in the oven for? And what should you do with the leftovers? Derby City Council's food safety team has offered these top tips to make sure your Christmas menu is safe and to avoid the risk of food poisoning. - 1. Don't wash your turkey. Washing raw turkey is unnecessary and can spread germs. Harmful bacteria can easily splash from raw meat and poultry onto worktops, chopping boards, dishes and utensils. Germs that cause food poisoning can also linger for days in the sink. Up to 80% of people significantly increase the risk of food poisoning by washing their turkeys before cooking them. - 2. Make sure your turkey is cooked thoroughly. Check your bird is steaming hot all the way through. Cut into the thickest part of the bird to check that none of the meat is pink and ensure that the juices which run out are clear. - 3. Use your leftovers safely. We all hate to waste food, so if you've stored cooked turkey in the fridge, eat it within two days. If you want to make your turkey leftovers last longer, put them in the freezer within one to two hours of cooking. Portion up food to aid cooling and then store in the freezer. - 4. Defrost your leftovers thoroughly. If you have frozen your leftovers to make them last even longer, defrost them thoroughly before reheating. Defrost them in the fridge overnight or in the microwave if you are going to cook and eat them straight away. Eat defrosted leftovers within 24-hours and do not refreeze. The only exception is if you are defrosting raw food, which can be refrozen after it's been cooked. - 5. Use your leftovers creatively. Love Food Hate Waste has some great suggestions to make the most of your leftovers. Visit them at www.lovefoodhatewaste.com/recipes - 6. Keep it clean. Always wash and dry your hands thoroughly before preparing food and after handling raw meat or poultry. Make sure your worktops and utensils are clean and disinfected. - 7. Be fridge friendly. Check your fridge is at the right temperature – below 5°C – to stop germs from growing. Don't pack the food too tightly as the cold air needs to circulate to cool your food. - 8. Defrost fully. If you buy a frozen turkey, make sure that the turkey is fully defrosted before cooking it. It can take as long as 48-hours for a large turkey to thaw. When you start defrosting, put the turkey in a large covered dish at the bottom of the fridge. Avoid touching other foods and ensure the dish is large enough to collect any liquid, so it doesn't contaminate other foods. - 9. Avoid cross-contamination. Use different chopping board and knives for raw meat and foods that are ready-to-eat, like cooked meats, salads and raw vegetables, and ensure they are cleaned between each use. This will help to stop germs spreading. Keep your raw turkey and other raw meats on the bottom shelf of the fridge, separate from other foods. - 10. Food safety at Christmas is not just about turkeys. Most people are aware of the importance of handling poultry safely, but many don't consider the risk of food poisoning from vegetables. Remember that it's important to peel your vegetables as necessary, because soil can sometimes carry harmful bacteria. Although many food producers have good systems in place to clean vegetables, the risk can never be entirely eliminated. Washing with rubbing and movement will help to remove bacteria from the surface of fruit and vegetables. Try to wash the least spoiled items first and give each of them a final rinse. Brushing off dry soil before washing may help reduce the amount of washing required to clean the vegetables thoroughly. Councillor Asaf Afzal, cabinet Member for planning, environment and public protection, said: "Christmas is a time for all the family to come together and enjoy themselves and food plays an important part of that. "If we all follow these basic food safety tips, we can avoid things like food poisoning over the festive period. I hope everyone has a happy and healthy Christmas."

All I want for Christmas is....to avoid giving my family food poisoning! Top tips on cooking Christmas dinner

Anger as Derby Royal Mail customers face delays and parking tickets

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CUSTOMERS trying to pick up Christmas parcels from the Royal Mail's depot in Midland Road have been faced with long delays. And their frustration and anger was intensified yesterday when some of them collected parking tickets while waiting to collect their packages. Businesses have also been affected – including the Derby Telegraph, which was unable to pick up any of its mail yesterday. Telegraph Facilities co-ordinator John Forde said he went to the sorting office as usual at 8.30am only to find big queues of people waiting. The usual sack of mail was not ready. He went back three times but each time there was no sign of it. John said: "The guy at the counter said we should complain to the management. He said something about them not having any staff in the sorting office over the weekend, so a backlog built up. "There were one or two other guys there who normally pick up their mail and there was nothing for them either. "People were queuing out of the door and the traffic wardens were going around ticketing cars which had been parked outside. "No-one is going to buy a ticket when they think they'll only be there for five minutes." A spokesman for the city council said it would not yet be able to reveal the number of parking tickets handed out around the sorting office. Derby Telegraph readers last night took to social media to vent their anger at the news. User John Brittain said: "It was never like this years ago when it had real managers who knew what they were doing and planned. Shame." KhalSir said he did not bother joining a huge queue a few days ago. He said his parcel was redelivered. Rapunzellet said: "Privatisation did not help then?" Royal Mail spokeswoman Jennifer Bird last night said: "Christmas is the busiest time of year for Royal Mail. We apologise to customers who have experienced delays in collecting items or posting items from Derby Delivery Office and ask customers to be patient when picking up parcels. "Royal Mail makes every effort to deliver mail to customers first time. If this is not possible because they are not at home when we attempt to deliver an item that needs a signature or is too large to fit through the letterbox, Royal Mail can now leave these items with a neighbour. "Alternatively, customers can arrange a redelivery free of charge on a day that is convenient for them or we can deliver the item to a different address within the same postcode area. "We have also extended our opening hours at the callers office from 0630-1930hrs Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, 0630-2000hrs Wednesday and 0630-1730hrs on Saturdays and 0630-1700hrs on Christmas Eve."

Anger as Derby  Royal Mail customers face delays and parking tickets

Is this the worst Christmas card ever? Derby tenants get not-so-festive message from Derwent Living

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COULD this be the least festive Christmas message ever? Housing association Derwent Living has sent out a leaflet to tenants saying: "There's no break from paying your rent this Christmas. "Keep your account up-to-date over the festive season." The message appears above an image of colourful presents lying in snow. On the back, a message reads: "Our offices are closed from midday on December 23 and reopen on January 2 but that doesn't mean that rent payments should stop. "Every New Year, we see a surge in rent arrears and January sees the most applications for court action and evictions." The message attracted a mixed reaction from our online readers, with HighOctane saying: "Scrooge is obviously in charge of rent collection", but Dianae saying: "I'd rather a friend made sure they didn't become homeless in 2014 than give me some gift or other." Richard Cookson, head of income management at Derwent Living, said the organisation sent out the "flyers" to 1,000 homes. He said: "Derwent Living recently sent out flyers – which are not Christmas cards – to customers in rent arrears reminding them that rent must still be paid over the festive period. "Every year, we see a huge rise in arrears over Christmas and our flyers are a way of reminding people that although there are lots of things to pay for at this time of year, rent must remain a priority. "Last January, Derwent Living saw arrears increase by £100,000, which meant less money for building and improving homes. He said support was offered to those who were struggling, adding: "We have a public duty to make sure those who are falling behind with their rent are contacted and appropriate help and debt advice given."WIN A VOUCHER: Post a picture on our Facebook page of the worst Christmas card you've ever had or been sent and we'll give away a £10 M&S gift voucher to the best/worst one!

Is this the worst Christmas card ever? Derby tenants get not-so-festive message from Derwent Living

Billy Kee scores winner as Burton Albion beat Fleetwood Town to book FA Cup third round date at Bournemouth

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BURTON Albion earned an FA Cup third round trip to Championship side Bournemouth last night with a 1-0 replay win over Fleetwood Town at the Pirelli Stadium. Billy Kee – who bailed the Brewers out with a late leveller in the first second round tie – won it with another excellent strike in the first half to see off the Cod Army. It was another tense affair between the sides following their 1-1 draw at Highbury Stadium. Then, Kee salvaged a replay for Burton with his late leveller. Again, there was little between Gary Rowett's men and the visitors, who are rivals for promotion to League One this season. But thanks to Kee – and another determined performance to keep a clean sheet – the Brewers earned £27,000 and a chance to test themselves against Championship opposition. It was a seventh 1-0 win of the season for Albion and a 10th clean sheet in what is shaping up to be a very successful campaign. They never really looked in trouble against Fleetwood and there were very positive signs of a partnership being struck up between Kee and Rene Howe, who worked tirelessly to close players down and help out with his defensive duties. Rowett named an unchanged side from Saturday's slightly disappointing 1-1 draw with York City in League Two. Adam McGurk again missed out as he recovers from the nasty blow to the head he took in the original tie with Fleetwood. The Cod Army were missing winger Matty Blair, who was arguably the most dangerous player on the pitch when the sides drew at Highbury Stadium. It was a fairly even start, with neither side creating much of note in the opening 20 minutes. Kee then gave Albion the lead with another cracker which made it four in his last four appearances. Damien McCrory's cross from the left was headed back by Hussey at the far post for Kee to turn on the edge of box and find the bottom corner with a lovely finish. Jeff Hughes, who scored for Fleetwood in the original tie, hobbled off after he came off worse having flown into a tackle with Lee Bell which earned him a booking. Howe had a chance just after the half-hour mark as he met Alex MacDonald's cracking cross but the big striker was crowded out as he chased his own header. Three minutes into the second half keeper Dean Lyness had to get down quickly and block a shot from Gareth Evans as he got onto a ball into the box from substitute Antoni Sarcevic. Howe had a shot from the edge of the box deflected over by Mark Roberts in the 51st minute before MacDonald drove in a low free kick from a tight angle which Fleetwood keeper Scott Davies was quickly down to stop. The game exploded into life just short of the hour when the dangerous Sarcevic went down under a challenge from Bell in the box. Referee Charles Brakespear immediately blew up for a dive from the Fleetwood man and Albion were incensed. Phil Edwards picked up a yellow for an angry shove on Sarcevic in a 16-man melee. When tempers had calmed Sarcevic was also rightly booked. The flashpoint seemed to stir Albion and Davies clawed away a header from Hussey. Kee then turned and blasted a shot over.

Billy Kee scores winner as Burton Albion beat Fleetwood Town to book FA Cup third round date at Bournemouth

Former Derby County keeper Mart Poom back in the city this week

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FORMER Derby County goalkeeper Mart Poom is back in the city this week. The Estonian star is to attend the Rams' Championship match against Doncaster Rovers at the iPro Stadium on Saturday. And Poom, who played 166 games for Derby between 1997-2003 and was player of the year in 1999-2000, will also be taking part in an autograph signing session for fans at the DCFCMegastore on Friday, between 3.30pm and 4.30pm. Poom took part in a training session with the Rams at Moor Farm yesterday. Rams head coach Steve McClaren, first-team coach Paul Simpson and goalkeeping coach Eric Steele are also due to make a guest appearance at the club shop this week. The trio will be available to sign autographs and pose for photographs between 4.30pm and 5.30pm tomorrow.

Former Derby County keeper Mart Poom back in the city this week

Man killed by a train in Derby is named

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A MAN who died after being hit by a train on a railway line in Derby has been named.

Curtis Petty, 30, died on the line at Pear Tree train station shortly after 3.15pm on Sunday.

Mr Petty had a history of mental illness and was being treated at the Radbourne unit at the Royal Derby Hospital.

The train was the 14.04 service from Crewe to Derby.

Police and ambulances were called to the incident but he was pronounced dead at the scene.

A spokesman for the British Transport Police said on Sunday that the incident was not being treated as suspicious.

Man killed by a train in Derby is named

Callum Ball would be up for switch to Notts County if Derby County contract is not renewed

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CALLUM Ball says he would be open to a permanent move to Notts County if he leaves Derby County. The 21-year-old striker is on loan at Meadow Lane from the Rams and made his first start in Saturday's 4-0 win against Colchester United, which lifted them off the bottom of the League One table. He has also made two substitute appearances for the Magpies since joining them on a short-term deal. Ball's current contract at Derby is due to expire at the end of this season. "I've only got five or six months left at Derby, so I've got to impress here," said the Rams academy graduate. "I'd like to stay at Derby, because I've been there for 10 or 11 years now but if it came to an end there and Notts County wanted to sign me, I'd be more than happy to sign here." Ball has not featured for the Rams this season and had a loan spell at Torquay United earlier in the campaign. "It's a different manager now and they're doing well, so it's hard to change the team there," he added. "I'm happy for the boys and, hopefully, they can get promoted. Hopefully, I can get a new contract there or if it comes to it, if Notts County want to sign me something could happen here."

Callum Ball would be up for switch to Notts County if Derby County contract is not renewed


Former Derby County star Michael Johnson to sit on Inclusion Advisory Board

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FORMER Derby County captain Michael Johnson is to be part of a 10-strong group aiming to increase inclusion in football. The new Inclusion Advisory Board (IAB) will be headed by Football Association board member Heather Rabbatts. The make-up of the panel has been revealed ahead of its first meeting in January. As well as providing guidance on equality within the game, the IAB will also monitor the delivery of Football's Inclusion and Anti-Discrimination Action Plan for 2013-2017. The IAB aims to widen diversity in the sport as well as clarify anti-discrimination regulations and sanctions. "This group is vital for meeting the future aims and ambitions of a modern FA," said Rabbatts. "We believe that we have a breadth of representation, skills and experiences that will give direction and guidance for the game." Rabbatts will be joined by Johnson, who played 150 games for Derby between 2003 and 2008 and helped the club win promotion to the Premier League in 2006-07, and former England and Chelsea defender Graeme Le Saux. The remaining members of the group are Shelley Alexander, co-founder of Women in Football, which seeks to support females working in football, and Joyce Cook, the founding managing director of the Centre for access to Football in Europe (CAFE) and Chair of Level Playing Field (LPF). Rimla Akhtar, chair of the Muslim Women Sports Foundation since 2005, and FA Council member Thura Win also join the panel. Rishi Jain is Kick It Out Football League Clubs Development Officer, Edward Lord OBE is the chair of the London FA Inclusion Advisory Group, with Peter Clayton an FA Council member.

Former Derby County star Michael Johnson to sit on Inclusion Advisory Board

TELEGRAPH COMMENT: There's nothing 'festive' about this Derby rent reminder

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THERE is no particularly comfortable way for a landlord to remind its tenants of their obligations. The prime one of those, of course, is to keep up with their rent payment. And the hard fact is that this is the most likely time of the year for them to fall into arrears. Debt figures – for housing arrears, bank accounts, credit cards – are always at their highest in January as so many people over-stretch themselves at Christmas. So Derwent Living understandably felt it appropriate to ask its tenants not to fall behind with their rent at this difficult time. It is the method which it chose to impart the message, though, which has raised eyebrows. It did so through a Christmas card – it now describes it as a flyer, but it certainly looks like a Christmas card. That probably meant a considerable saving on postage, if it was always going to send a card and a rent reminder to everyone anyway. But if it wanted an understanding and positive response from those at whom it was directed, this does not seem likely to achieve it. Christmas provokes extremes of emotions. For a majority of us – but by no means all – it is a time of celebration and enjoying time with family and friends. For a considerable number of people, however, it can heighten anxieties – maybe because of absent friends, family members being mourned or the swirling and rising waters of debt. The arrival of such a Christmas missive may well accentuate whatever feeling of depression which they may be feeling at this stressful time. There has to be a better way to help people under financial pressure to come through this period unscathed.

TELEGRAPH COMMENT: There’s nothing ‘festive’ about this Derby rent reminder

Derby County coach Paul Simpson says defensive solidarity has helped Derby County's attack

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WITH 42 in 20 games, Derby County are the hottest ticket in town when it comes to goals in the Championship. They have scored 10 more than both Leicester City and Leeds United, 11 more than Burnley, for whom Danny Ings is in top form, and 13 more than rivals Nottingham Forest. Goals catch the eye and Derby have hit both Millwall and Blackpool for five this season. Five were also put past League One outfit Brentford in the Capital One Cup. Rams first team coach Paul Simpson knows a thing or two about creating and scoring goals. Simpson was a winger with an immaculate left foot in his playing days. He scored 57 goals in 225 games for Derby, including hat-tricks against Tranmere Rovers, Portsmouth and Bristol City. When asked for his thoughts on the current firepower in Derby's team, Simpson raised a few eyebrows when he quickly turned the subject to the defending! "I know this sounds odd coming from me who, as a player, was solely intent on getting and creating goals, but the biggest thing for me is the goals against column," he said. "We have managed to tidy up the goals against column a little bit." Three clean sheets in the last six matches and three goals conceded have boosted the Rams' goal difference. Only Burnley, with plus 17, have a better goal difference than Derby's plus 16. Leaders Queens Park Rangers are on plus 14, Leicester City (+10), Leeds United (+9) and Reading, Forest and Brighton (+7). Derby have tightened up defensively. "We are delighted for the whole team that they got another clean sheet in the win at Charlton," Simpson said. "I know goalkeepers and the back four get the credit but that is a bit unfair on the likes of John Eustace and the midfielders and also striker Chris Martin, who does a great job for us as that first man in defending set pieces." The subject returned to Derby's goal tally and Simpson stressed the importance of goals from all departments of the team. "You need goals from all over the team," Simpson said. "I was delighted the other week when Richard Keogh got himself a goal. "Craig Bryson is getting goals for us, Jamie Ward is chipping in with his share, Johnny Russell will score goals when he gets a regular run of games and Chris Martin has been excellent. "We need to keep them all firing, all getting goals. "I would like the full-backs to start chipping in with a few goals but maybe that is me being a bit greedy!" Neither left-back Craig Forsyth nor right-back Andre Wisdom have found the net, as yet. Martin is top scorer with 13 followed by Bryson (nine), Ward (six) and Russell (five).

Derby County coach Paul Simpson says defensive solidarity has helped Derby County's attack

Derby County's on-loan defender Zak Whitbread hoping to end frustrating spell on sidelines due to injury

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ZAK Whitbread is hoping to bring an end to what has been a frustrating time for Derby County's on-loan defender. Whitbread has missed eight matches with a calf injury. The central defender joined the Rams on loan from Leicester City at the end of September and made his debut in the 4-4 draw against Ipswich Town. He then helped Derby beat Leeds United 3-1 and started in the victory over Watford at Vicarage Road before he limped off in the 33rd minute and was replaced by Jake Buxton. Buxton and skipper Richard Keogh have formed the centre-back pairing since and the Rams have won six and drawn one of the eight games. Whitbread's loan expires in January. The 29-year-old has had to sit and watch the team's progress but he is now back in training. "We felt the under-21 game against Notts County on Monday was too early for Zak to return to action," said first-team coach Paul Simpson. "It is a case of building his fitness. Hopefully, he will have a full week of training and he may be an option for us over the Christmas period. "We were really pleased with what Zak was doing in the games we saw him, really pleased with his contribution. "It has been a real disappointment and very frustrating for him that he has not been able to be involved." Simpson says calf injuries can be frustrating. "It is something I suffered with towards the end of my career," he added. "You get to a point where it feels really good and then when you start to extend it, you feel pain again. You've just got to be patient."

Derby County's on-loan defender Zak Whitbread hoping to end frustrating spell on sidelines due to injury

18 years for Derby predator who knocked out young boys with butane gas

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A PREDATOR who knocked out young boys with butane gas before seriously sexually assaulting them has been jailed for 18 years. David Chilcott admitted his 20-year-old offences to police after the windows of his Alvaston home were smashed last year. When asked by officers why he might be a target for vandals, he confessed to sexually assaulting three vulnerable boys in the 1980s and 1990s. The three friends, aged between 10 and 13, would go to what Judge Jonathan Gosling described as Chilcott's "grubby" Derby home – where he would buy them gas and drugs, wait until they were "incapacitated" and then assault them. In statements read out at Derby Crown Court one of the victims, who is now in his 30s, said he felt his "childhood had been stolen". Chilcott, a 59-year-old factory machinist of London Road, admitted four counts of committing a serious sexual assault, three counts of indecency with a child and two counts of indecently assaulting a child under 14. Jailing him, Judge Gosling said: "I don't know which is worse – the sheer depths of your depravity or your sheer indifference towards the effects this has had (on the victims). "You waited until these boys were intoxicated before indulging your revolting sexual inclination on these pre-pubescent boys. "You would make them take part in your extreme perversion. One of those victims is in court and I can see for myself the effect it has had on him. "You have seriously blighted their childhoods and the effects of your depravity have gone into their adult lives. You appear to have no appreciation of these crimes." Esther Harrison, prosecuting, told the court how the victims came forward last year after Chilcott reported to the police a number of incidents of criminal damage. She said when he was interviewed by the police he admitted that in the past he had been in "an unsafe relationship" with one of the boys. The three victims came forward in April and May last year and in interviews with the police told them what they had experienced at Chilcott's hands. On the day his trial was due to start, Chilcott pleaded guilty to the charges – sparing them the ordeal of having to give evidence. Miss Harrison said: "The offences took place between 1989 and 1993, when the defendant was in his 30s and the boys aged between 10 and 14. "One of the boys became friends with him and he would go to his house where the defendant bought butane gas which he would sniff, as well as alcohol, cigarettes and cannabis." Miss Harrison read out to the court victim impact statements from the three boys, whose identity is protected by law. She said: "One of them said he feels ashamed that he kept it to himself for so long. "He has struggled throughout his life with drinks and drugs problems. "Another victim said he 'numbed himself' to what had happened but felt uncomfortable handling his own children as they grew up as a result of what happened to him. "And the third victim said it was a relief the defendant pleaded guilty so he did not have to talk about these things in open court and in front of people." Steve Gosnell, for Chilcott, said his client had not offended since these incidents. He said: "It is a plain admission that he took advantage of them (the victims). "For the past 20 years he has led a law-abiding life. "He has moved on with his life but unfortunately those he abused have not been able to move on in the same way. "I can't explain it, I don't think he can, but he is sorry." Speaking after the sentencing, Detective Constable Stephen Sherlock, senior investigating officer in the case, said: "Justice has been served for the victims and this sentence reflects the seriousness of the case. "It also gives the victims some closure to move forward with their lives. We take these offences very seriously, and we provide support and confidentially to victims of historic sex abuse."

18 years for Derby predator who knocked out young boys with butane gas

Masked men in night-raid terror for Ilkeston widow, 86

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AN 86-YEAR-OLD widow was left "frozen in fear" when she woke to find two masked burglars in her bedroom. Beryl Godfrey was left "absolutely terrified" following the break-in at her Ilkeston home. She said she thinks the men she discovered in her room "should be locked up and the key thrown away" after she was targeted while she slept. Neighbour Michelle O'Connor, 41, has known childless Beryl all her life and said she was "like a second mother" to her. She said: "My mobile went and I saw it was Beryl so I answered it but couldn't hear her. I knew something was wrong so I went round to her house straight away. "Beryl can only walk with the aid of a frame and when I got to her house I walked in the kitchen and got to her just as she was about to fall over. "She said to me 'I've been robbed by two men, I woke up and they were stood in my bedroom wearing masks'. "She said 'I asked them what they were doing and they carried on going through my things before leaving as I got out of my bed'. "Beryl has been left absolutely terrified to death about what happened. I think it is absolutely disgusting that she was targeted in this way." Michelle said the break-in happened at Beryl's home in Cantelupe Road at 9.45pm on Monday, December 9. She said Beryl woke when the raiders switched on her bedroom light as they searched. Michelle, who has been Beryl's carer for eight years, said: "It appears they only took her purse which didn't contain a huge amount of cash. But the point is not what was taken, it is that someone like Beryl was targeted by these men. She lost her husband Jack in 1995 when he suffered a heart attack and she has been on her own since. "She told me she thinks the men that did this to her are disgusting and that she wants to see them caught, locked up and the key thrown away." The raiders got into the bungalow by forcing a door and smashing a key safe off the wall. Police have visited her and a burglar alarm and security lights have been fitted to her property. Michelle said: "The police have been brilliant but the damage is more psychological. She doesn't feel anywhere near as safe as she used to." Police urged anyone who may have seen suspicious activity in the street or the area or who knows who was responsible to call 101.

Masked men in night-raid terror  for Ilkeston widow, 86

Better service urged over Royal Mail Derby parcel delays

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ROYAL Mail is being urged to introduce a better system for delivering parcels after customers were this week caught up in long queues while collecting their items. On Monday, customers trying to pick up Christmas parcels from the Royal Mail's depot in Midland Road faced a lengthy wait. And for some, their frustration was compounded as they got parking tickets while inside the depot. Readers commenting on the situation on the Derby Telegraph's website called for improvements. Writing on the site, DerbyBorn said: "It is an unbelievably inadequate service. I dread getting a card saying there is a parcel to be collected. Something better is needed." When Royal Mail cannot deliver a parcel because the homeowner is out, a card is posted through their letterbox telling them where the item can be picked up – usually a Royal Mail sorting office or a Post Office branch. Alternatively, customers can request their parcel be redelivered free of charge. They can also ask for the parcel to be placed in a nominated "safe place" or with a neighbour. Christmas shopping over the internet has increased year-on-year and due to the volume of parcels sent in the past few weeks, a number of people have gone to collect the items from Royal Mail. Yesterday(17), the Derby Telegraph highlighted the problems experienced by some customers at Midland Road. This led readers to take to the paper's website – www.derbytelegraph.co.uk – to vent their frustrations. Reader Wedjateye said: "I had a card pushed through my letterbox today saying they'd left a parcel in my 'official safe place', which they claim was my garage. "I've never nominated a 'safe place' and my garage is always locked. Guess what, no parcel! Anyone's guess what and where it is now." Ksdhindsa79 said: "I too went to collect a package about a week ago. On seeing the huge queue as we approached, my wife and I quickly decided to drive back home. Royal Mail just don't have the staff and the last thing I wanted to do was join a queue which was almost 50 metres long." MatthewJB said: "I'm glad I chose to have my parcel redelivered on Wednesday. That said, I'm not sure how I missed the delivery. The postman must have quite a gentle knock!" Royal Mail has said it "makes every effort to deliver mail to customers first time". It also apologised to customers who had experienced delays in collecting parcels – and said that it had extended the opening times of its offices to allow people more time to pick them up. Royal Mail recently became a private company – a move which was resisted by the Communication Workers' Union, which warned the service could suffer. The union raised the threat of a Christmas strike but this was averted earlier this month after it reached an agreement on pay and pensions. Chris Sheldon, the CWU branch secretary covering Derby, said: "The fact is, more of us are shopping online, which means more parcels. "In this respect, the Derby delivery office has not moved with the times and needs investment. There is a joint agreement between the union and the company to see delivery offices updated. "I believe there is a lack of staff in the delivery office – I would urge customers caught up in the queues not to take out their frustrations on my fellow members working there. They are doing the best job they can."

Better service urged over Royal Mail Derby parcel delays


Who's been in the courts?

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MARK McCarthy, 28, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 16-week jail sentence for stealing meat from the Co-op, a camera from Argos, a TV from the Co-op, washing powder from One Stop and perfume from Debenhams, all in Chesterfield on September 5, and alcohol from Tesco Metro in Derby on November 13.

SHAWN Whitmore, 29, of Wood Road, Chaddesden, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, fined £110 and given six penalty points on his licence for damaging a police radio, driving without insurance or the correct licence, and resisting a police officer in Derby on September 19.

MARK Gallear, 49, of St Thomas Road, Derby, was given a two-year conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 surcharge and £85 costs for possessing amphetamines and being in Derby Royal Infirmary with intent to steal on October 29.

ROCKY Taylor, 27, of Salisbury Drive, Midway, was given a community order with alcohol treatment, told to do 80 hours' unpaid work and pay a £60 surcharge for threatening behaviour in Swadlincote on October 22.

GARETH Haywood, 28, of Uttoxeter New Road, Derby, was fined £600, told to pay £85 costs and disqualified from driving for a year for driving a quad bike without a licence or insurance in Matlock on July 5.

JASON Bowman, 25, of Dean Street, Derby, was told to pay £300 compensation and given eight penalty points on his licence for driving without insurance, causing damage to another vehicle, and not leaving contact details in Derby on June 11.

GEMMA Cole, 30, of Wood Road, Chaddesden, was given a community order, told to carry out 60 hours' unpaid work and must pay a £60 victim surcharge for allowing the production of Class B drug cannabis at her premises in Chaddesden on September 19.

ANA Petre, 18, of no fixed abode, was given a six-month conditional discharge for loitering in Hartington Street and Normanton Road, Derby, for the purpose of prostitution between September 17 and November 13.

ALAN Sharpe, 42, of College Street, Long Eaton, was jailed for 26 weeks for stealing a Mercedes, drink-driving and driving without a licence or insurance in Long Eaton on October 21.

FAHEEM Ali, 28, of Balfour Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on June 8.

RYAN Simpson, 25, of Milldale Road, Long Eaton, was fined £200 and told to pay £120 costs and £2.10 compensation for travelling on a train without a valid ticket on June 7.

ANTHONY Dry, 25, of Manners Road, Ilkeston, was fined £110, told to pay £35 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without the correct licence or insurance, or MoT test certificate, in Ilkeston on July 29.

No TV licence

THe following people have appeared before magistrates charged with using a colour television without a licence:

FAY Watson, 35, of Hope Street, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 12.

KAREN Winfield, 36, of Norman Street, Ilkeston, was fined £35, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.

JESSICA Zoppi, 34, of King Alfred Street, Derby, was fined £300, with £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 13.

AUDREY Cameron, 32, of Moor Road, Breadsall Village, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement and told to pay a £60 victim surcharge for stealing shoes from Shoe Zone and children's clothes from Sports Direct, both in Derby, on October 19 and 21.

ROBERT Agbrahall, 42, of Kent Road, Burton, was fined £215 with a 321 victim surcharge and £35 costs, and given five penalty points on licence, for driving above the 70mph speed limit on the A38 in Mickleover on July 29.

JOSEPH Grogan, 25, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a community order, told to carry out 60 hours' unpaid work, pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing perfume from Debenhams, in Derby, on October 28.

SHAUN Archbold, 31, of Mickley Lane, Stretton, was fined £240 with a £24 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance or a valid MOT test certificate in South Normanton on July 12.

VICTORIA Fell, 28, of Lathkill Drive, Marehay, was fined £105 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving while using a hand-held mobile phone and without wearing a seatbelt in Heage on July 17.

BENJAMIN Gussoq, 24, of Loscoe Road, Heanor, was fined £110, told to pay a £20 victim surcharge and £35 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Heanor on May 24.

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THE following people have appeared before magistrates charged with using a colour TV without a licence:

SEBASTIAN Sidorczuk, 34, of Lincoln Way, Midway, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between July 29 and August 30.

LISA Simpson, 38, of Monsal Drive, Spondon, was fined £400, with £40 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 27.

GARRY Smith, 33, of Field Court, Kilburn, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 3 and September 4.

VANESSA Stone, 42, of Farmhouse Road, Sinfin, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 12.

MARIE Summers, 42, of Cranmer Street, Long Eaton, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 13.

DAVID John Tallent, 41, of Coupland Place, Somercotes, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 3.

VICTORIA Taylor, 24, of Marsh Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.

GILLIAN Walton, 48, of Glossop Street, Derby, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 9.

ANNETTE Warren, 37, of Grampian Way, Sinfin, was fined £70, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between June 12 and July 13.

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ABDUL Ghani, 46, of Almond Street, Derby, was fined £180 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points for driving in a manner dangerous to passengers by carrying two adult passengers, one baby and four children in one car in Derby on May 28. He was also fined £90 for not wearing a seatbelt.

JAMIE Whitmore, 27, of St Vincent Close, Long Eaton, was fined £200, told to pay £120 costs and £4.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on June 10.

MARK Dunlop, 29, of Mount Carmel Street, Derby, was jailed for six weeks for stealing whisky from Tesco and bolt croppers from Wilkinson, both in Derby, on November 12.

ROBERT Grace, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and told to pay a £15 victim surcharge for begging in Derby on November 3.

ARKADIJS Stepans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 and told to pay £85 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on June 14

BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on October 29.

JULIUS Kovac, 24, of Sutherland Road, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on August 6.

WAZIR Mahroof, 24, of Dairyhouse Road, Derby, was fined £145 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance on July 17.

SATNAM Singh, 26, of Anstey Court, Oakwood, was fined £180, told to pay £35 costs and given nine penalty points on licence for driving without due care and attention and without insurance in Breaston on August 26.

STEVE Shaw, , of Stainsby Avenue, Heanor, was fined £700 with a £70 victim surcharge and told to pay £400 costs for failing to comply with a noticed served by Amber Valley Borough Council requiring him to tidy waste material from his garden between May 30 and September 4.

JAMES Clarke, 23, of Buttermere Close, Long Eaton, was fined £37 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £95 costs and £2.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on July 31.

SHELLEY Comery, 51, of Hexham Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for driving without insurance or an MOT test certificate in Ilkeston on May 19.

THOMAS Green, 24, of Littleover, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 14.

TERRENCE Hall, 25, of Moss Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Allenton on June 13.

LANCE Serra, 34, of Hawthorn Street, Derby, was fined £400 with a £40 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 7.

SHARON Bull, 49, of Talbot Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs, and given six penalty points on licence, for driving without insurance or an MOT test certificate in Derby on June 16.

SIMON Williams-Hunter, 35, of Hastings Road, Swadlincote, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Swadlincote on June 10.

JAMIE Whitmore, 27, of St Vincent Close, Long Eaton, was fined £200, told to pay £120 costs and £4.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on June 10.

MARK Dunlop, 29, of Mount Carmel Street, Derby, was jailed for six weeks for stealing whiskey from Tesco and bolt croppers from Wilkinsons, both in Derby, on November 12.

ROBERT Grace, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and told to pay a £15 victim surcharge for begging in Derby on November 3.

ARKADIJS Stepans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 and told to pay £85 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on June 14

BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on October 29.

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THE following people have all appeared before Southern Derbyshire magistrates charged with using a colour television without a licence:

FRANK Pearson, 69, of Cardigan Street, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on May 16.

CHARLOTTE Phillips, 20, of Humbleton Drive, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between May 10 and June 11.

EMMA Phillips, 27, of Ash Crescent, Ripley, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 3.

PATRICIA Pickering, 43, of Norfolk Road, Long Eaton, was fined £35, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 1.

ANDZELIKA Pomerening, 24, of Whiston Street, Derby, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between September 1 and 13.

OLIVIER Rockley, 20, of Melton Court, Sandiacre, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on July 31.

DEBBIE Rogerson, 47, of Holme Close, Hatton, was fined £110, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 28.

MICHELLE Saglam, 34, of Depedale Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 10.

DEBORAH Scott, 44, of Pear Tree Avenue, Ripley, was fined £93, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £130 costs, for an offence between June 25 and July 26.

------------------------------ The following people have all appeared before Southern Derbyshire magistrates for using a colour television without a licence:

JAMES Morgan, 33, of Stonesdale Court, Alvaston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 3 and September 4.

JESSICA Newsome, 25, of Dawsmere Close, Derby, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.

SONIA Pallett, 50, of Bentley Dale, Hartshorne, was fined £55, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 29.

EMMA Pearson, 41, of Moyne Gardens, Chellaston, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 10 and September 11.

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CHRISTOPHER Knight, 22, of Stanhope Road, Swadlincote, was given a community order and told to attend a drug rehabilitation programme for two months and put under a year's supervision order for stealing a quantity of steak from Sainsbury's, in Newhall, on October 23 and for being in possession of cannabis on October 28 at St Mary's Wharf police station, Derby.

SEAN Brendan O'Reilly, 30, of Ellastone Gardens, Alvaston, was given six weeks' jail suspended for 18 months, a year's supervision order and told to do 120 hours of unpaid work for causing fear of violence and committing an assault. He was also ordered to pay £100 compensation and £85 costs.

LEWIS Alexander, 27, of Crompton Street, Derby, was given a community order and told to do undertake probation activity for 20 hours over 10 days, carry out 80 hours of unpaid work and pay a victim surcharge of £65 and costs of £85 for assault.

PRABJIT Singh Johal, 26, of Eastbrae Road, Sunny Hill, was ordered to comply with a community order and complete a 60-day probation programme. He was also given an 18-month supervision order and told to do unpaid work for 80 hours and pay £65 victim surcharge and £85 costs for assault.

CHRISTOPHER Taylor, 25, of Cummings Street, Derby, was given a community order, told to undertake an employment training programme for five days, put on an 18-month supervision order and told to pay £60 surcharge and £85 costs for assault.

LUKE Tams, 19, Wood Street. Ilkeston, was discharged conditionally for six months and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15 for being in possession of cannabis.

MARCUS Stringer, 28, of Grosvenor Street, Derby, has been ordered to carry out a further seven hours of unpaid work for failing to comply with a community order made on June 11.

OMED Rahman, 33, of Lapwing Close, Sinfin, was fined £55 ordered to pay £50 compensation and £100 costs for assault on June 17.

ASHLEY Hogg, 47, of Parkfields Drive, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, fined £75 and told to pay a £20 victim surcharge and £85 costs, for stealing a Fred Perry jacket from Debenhams and using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour on October 26.

NICHOLAS Stredder, 41, of Wilson Street, Derby, has been given a four-month curfew order between the hours of 5pm and 6am everyday for failing to comply with a community order issued on October 10.

BRIAN Learmouth, 19, of Richmond Road, Derby, was fined £36 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for being drunk and disorderly on November 9.

JAMIE Holmes, 37, of Haddon Way, Long Eaton, was given a community order, with £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for stealing 11 shirts from Peacocks in Ilkeston.

MARK Charlton, 44, of Andrews Drive, Langley Mill, was jailed for four weeks for breaking a restraining order between June 1 and August 15.

THE following people were charged with watching television without a licence.

SHANE Bednall, 24, of Kew Crescent, Heanor, was fined £500 with £50 victim surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between August 4 and September 5.

STACIE Bowring, 24, of Bentley Dale, Hartshorne, was fined £400 with £40 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 13.

MALCOLM Collins, 58, of Knightsbridge, Derby, was fined £35 with £20 surcharge, and £90 costs for an offence on September 13.

KATHY Cooper, 29, of Lower Gladstone Street, Heanor, was fined £80 with £20 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between August 4 and September 5.

EMMA Cope, 38, of Crayford Road, Alvaston, was fined £400 with £40 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between May 14 and June 16.

SOPHIE Corbett, 20, was fined £200 with £20 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on June 25.

LAUREL Degg, 45, of Parks Avenue, South Wingfield, was fined £500 with £50 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 7.

STELLA Dobie, 55, of North Street, Swadlincote, was fined £300 with £30 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 2.

JORDAN Werkowski, 24, of Co-operative Street, Long Eaton, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing a mobile phone on October 24. He was given a further four weeks, to run concurrently, for damaging a door, gate and patio set on August 17 and two further weeks in jail, to run concurrently, for failing to surrender to custody on September 4 and October 31.

RAKESH Chander Kainth, 45, of Rawdon Street, Derby, was jailed for four weeks for stealing meat worth £40 from the Co-op on October 8. He was given a further four weeks, to run consecutively, for stealing meat worth £39.07 from the Co-op on October 12 and four weeks, also consecutively, for stealing meat worth £25.11 from Sainsbury's on November 7.

CRAIG Morgan, 25, of Uttoxeter New Road, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge and told to pay £308 compensation, a £15 surcharge and £85 costs for damaging a car on July 7.

LORRAINE Welsh, 52, of Swinburne Street, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge, with a £15 surcharge and £85 costs, for possessing diazepam on August 12.

ANN Catherine Hallam, 56, of Dryden Street, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for driving while disqualified on July 31. She was banned for a further five months.

MARIO Klyc, 24, of Shaftesbury Crescent, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for drink-driving on October 7. He was disqualified from driving for 40 months.

GARETH Vaughan Thomas, 33, of Epworth Villas, Duffield Road, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, for wasting police time on October 22. No order for costs was made.

AIDEN Charles John Thomason, 21, of Walnut Street, Allenton, was jailed for 21 weeks for assault on August 16.

ARCHIE James West Spencer, 21, of Ash Fields, Belper, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, with £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £1,498 compensation for damaging a door and window on August 29.

RUHULLAH Armani, 22, of Baker Street, Derby, was fined £266, with £26 victim surcharge, and disqualified from driving for six months, for stealing a Vauxhall Astra on September 18. No order for costs was made.

JACQUELINE Ann Keating, 51, of Abington Street, Allenton, was given a four-week jail sentence, suspended for a year, and told to pay £150 compensation for assaulting a police officer on June 22.

PHILLIP Betts, 32, of Station Court, Ilkeston, was given a community order and told to pay £160 compensation, £60 surcharge and £100 costs, for stealing two vacuum cleaners from the Co-op on August 14 and August 16.

GEORGE William Fernley, 20, of Tavistock Close, Stenson Fields, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, with £15 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour on June 15.

LEANNE Marie Peat, 30, of Briar Gate, Long Eaton, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, and told to pay £17.50 compensation and £85 costs, for stealing beer from the Co-op on September 4 and cigarettes from the Co-op on July 28.

PAUL Hallam, 24, of Longfield Lane, Ilkeston, was given a community order and told to pay £48 compensation for stealing make-up from Boots, Ilkeston, on October 24.

SHANE Joseph Keyland, 21, of Galway Avenue, Chaddesden, was jailed for eight weeks for stealing wine from Sainsbury's on October 7 and October 15.

BARRY Wright, 34, of London Road, Alvaston, was jailed for 18 weeks for stealing aftershave from Boots on November 12.

RUSSELL Bannister, 29, of Cantelupe Road, Ilkeston, was given a community order with £60 surcharge and told to pay £100 compensation and £85 costs for assault on July 6.

GARETH John Evans, 46, of Excelsior Drive, Woodville, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 surcharge and told to pay £625 costs for damaging a fence panel on April 10.

DWAYNE Aston Medcalf, 26, of Alleyne Close, Swadlincote, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for drink-driving on August 25. He was banned for 12 months.

MARIAN Magyar, 26, of Hawthorn Street, Derby, was told to pay £20 surcharge and £55 costs for stealing rings from Claire's Accessories on October 25.

ROSE-MARIE Nicholls, 45, of Hayes Avenue, Littleover, was fined £75 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing goods worth £381.54 from Asda. ADNAN Ali Quayum, 31, of Co-operative Street, Normanton, was fined £600, with a £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £600 costs for driving without insurance on March 22. His license was endorsed with six penalty points. SHERYL Easton, 42, of Bedford Street, Derby, was given a two-year conditional discharge, with a £15 victim surcharge, for stealing aftershave on October 27. No order for costs was made. JASON Peersaib, 43, of Addison Road, Allenton, was given an 18-month conditional discharge, with a £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for possessing methylmethcathinone on July 7. TANYA Munyebvu, 34, of Osmaston Road, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge with £15 surcharge, and told to pay £45 compensation and £85 costs for stealing an iPhone on July 27.

NICOLE Lucy Williamson, 27, of The Burrows, Newhall, was fined £110, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for drink driving on October 18. She was disqualified from driving for 18 months.

GEORGE Steven Bramley 21, of Cardigan Street, Chaddesden, was given a community order and told to pay £550 compensation for stealing a bike worth £80, a chainsaw worth £250 and a projector worth £300 between September 28 and October 10. No order for costs was made.

JOHN Astle, 40, of Harvey Road, Derby, was fined £120, with £20 surcharge and £35 costs for using a mobile phone while driving on May 9. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.

STEVEN Frederick Delacy, 58, of Castle Road, Castle Gresley, was fined £240, with £20 surcharge and £35 costs, for driving a vehicle which exceeded its maximum permitted weight on May 15.

BOGUSLAW Laszczynski, 51, of Crayford Road, Alvaston, was fined £65, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving with no MoT on May 12.

GRAHAM Parkin, 25, of Mackenzie Street, Derby, was jailed for 16 weeks for stealing electrical items from TK Maxx, in Derby, on October 25, breaching a conditional discharge.

JONATHAN Croft, 38, of Commerce Street, Derby, was fined £116 with £110 costs and told to pay back duty of £57.09 for having an unlicensed car on a public road on April 3.

LEE Andrew Ginger, of Outram Street, Ripley, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge and £110 costs for failing to notify the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car on February 8.

IAN Vernon, 39, of Wilson Street, Derby, was given a four-week prison sentence, suspended for 12 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge, for stealing perfume from Dazzle on November 7.

TONDERAI Andrew Chinyanda, 42, of Drysdale Road, Mickleover, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £110 costs, for failing to inform the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car in February.

KEVIN Russell, 51, of Burton Road, Derby, was given a community order and told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for wasting police time by giving a false report, in Derby, between January 1 and July 10.

PHILLIP Bennett, 51, of Donington Close, Sinfin, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on October 28.

MARK Friery, 36, of Lynden Avenue, Long Eaton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing aftershave and other items worth £102.67 from Asda on September 14.

ADAM Fulford, 23, of Francis Street, Derby, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for drink-driving on September 4. He was disqualified for three years.

NASAR Khan Mahmood, 33, of Oriel Court, Derby, was given a 12-month community order with £60 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for assault on September 27.

DEX Tenbrink, 26, of Pear Tree Street, Derby, was fined £50, with £20 surcharge, for failing to surrender to custody on October 29.

GEORDIE Boye, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was fined £60, with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for begging in Derby on October 22.

SAMUEL Pepper, 26, of Sitwell Street, Spondon, was fined £300, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 18 months for drink-driving in Derby on August 22.

JASON Bamford, 41, of Golden Valley, Riddings, was given a community order, told to carry out 100 hours' unpaid work, pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs, and disqualified from driving for 23 months for drink-driving in the Assembly Rooms car park, in Derby, on October 13.

JAMES Bainbrigge, 34, of Shelmory Close, Allenton, was given a restraining order and an eight-week jail sentence, suspended for 24 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for harassment in Derby between July 28 and September 17.

LEON Wilks, 20, of Cavendish Street, Derby, was given a community order and told to carry out 80 hours' unpaid work and pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for threatening behaviour in Derby on August 2.

BRANDON Draper, 23, of Little Hallam Lane, Ilkeston, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement and told to pay £250 compensation for burglary and possessing class B drug methylmethcathinone in Ilkeston on October 18. Magistrates ordered the destruction of the drug.

SANDRA Fern, 51, of Cockayne Mews, Ashbourne, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for possessing crack cocaine and diamorphine on May 25.

CHARLOTTE Emma Christine Allen, 26, of Waterford Drive, Chaddesden, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £110 costs, for failing to inform the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car on March 4.

AARON Hall, 25, of Emerson Square, Sunny Hill, was fined £55, with £20 victim surcharge, and must pay £200 costs, for assault on July 1.

SCOTT Thomas Weston, 46, of Cotmanhay Road, Ilkeston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay £85 costs and a £15 victim surcharge for stealing cable worth £50 from Harpbrand Engineers on September 14.

LUKE Alexander Hayward, 27, of Haig Street, Derby, was given a 14-week jail sentence, suspended for 12 months, for stealing a camera worth £309.99 from Argos. He must also pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs.

ANDREW Nicholas Mallett, 55, of Grafham Close, Chellaston, was fined £300, with £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for drink driving on October 10. He was also disqualified from driving for 16 months.

ADEVEMI Omorinove, 38, of May Street, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for failing to stop after an accident on March 17. His licence was endorsed with five penalty points.

MOHAMMED Nawaz, 57, of Leacroft Road, Derby, was fined £50, with a £20 victim surcharge, and ordered to pay £85 costs for possessing cannabis on August 8.

BENJAMIN Robert Cooper, 32, of Winchester Crescent, Chaddesden, was jailed for 16 weeks for assault on August 31. He must also pay £200 costs.

PAUL Foster, 37, of Bailey Street, Normanton, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months for breaching the terms of a previous community order made by magistrates on June 4 for possessing the class B drug methylmethcathinone in Derby on March 22.

RICHARD Pepper, 24, of Chadwick Avenue, Allenton, was jailed for four weeks for failing to comply with the terms of a community order made by magistrates on September 29 for criminal damage and assault in Derby on June 29.

ADAM Thorpe, 24, of Cardean Close, Chester Green, was jailed for eight weeks for failing to comply with the terms of a community order made by magistrates on July 24 for assault in Derby on July 7.

DAVID Mosley, 25, of Hexham Walk, Derby, had a community order made by magistrates on June 4 altered to include an alcohol treatment requirement.

SINEAD Thomson, 20, of Charnwood Street, Derby, was fined £150 for failing to abide by licence conditions by reporting to a supervising officer on August 15.

STEVEN Chand, 25, of Beeches Street, Derby, was given a restraining order, fined £150 and told to pay £275 costs for assault in Derby on August 12.

BRETT Traynor, 32, of Hartington Street, Derby, was fined £50, with a £20 victim surcharge, for possessing cannabis on August 20.

MOHAMMED Hassan, 30, of Whitaker Street, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with a £15 victim surcharge and ordered to pay £600 costs for assault on July 26.

MICHAEL Falconbridge, 35, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing aftershave from Debenhams on October 11.

CLIVE Beatty, 53, of Albion Street, Derby, was fined £50 with a £20 victim surcharge for begging in the street on October 8.

MICHAEL Beeson, 56, of Deborah Drive, Chaddesden, was given a community order, told to carry out 80 hours' unpaid work and must pay £50 compensation, a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for touching a girl under 16 in a sexual way in Derby on September 18.

STEPHEN Gallacher, 23, of Quarn Way, Derby, was given a community order with drug treatment, told to carry out 100 hours' unpaid work and must pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for possessing cocaine and cannabis in Derby on August 10. Magistrates ordered the destruction of the drugs.

PERRY Davis, 24, of Crewe Street, Derby, was jailed for 28 days for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on October 10.

LINZIE Grey, 28, of Starthe Bank, Heanor, was given a community order with supervision requirement and told to pay £200 compensation for damaging a car in Ilkeston on May 28.

VILIS Kozlovskis, 30, of Twyford Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to carry out 150 hours unpaid work, told to pay £85 costs and an £80 victim surcharge and was disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving while disqualified and without insurance in Derby on October 9.

TRISTAN Berridge, 38, of Thorndike Avenue, Alvaston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge and £85 costs for failing to stop drinking in a public place in St Peter's Street, Derby, on September 16, when asked to do so by a police community support officer.

SIMON Banjanin, 25, of Allestree Street, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without insurance and drink-driving in Spondon on July 15.

ALEX Kelsey, 18, of Station Road, Burton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £85 compensation and a £15 victim surcharge for criminal damage in Swadlincote on October 14.

LEE Brown, 33, of Green Lane, Derby, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing tracksuit bottoms and a hat from JD Sports, in Derby, on October 28.

VILIS Kozlovskis, 30, of Twyford Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to carry out 150 hours unpaid work, told to pay £85 costs and an £80 victim surcharge and was disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving while disqualified and without insurance in Derby on October 9.

TRISTAN Berridge, 38, of Thorndike Avenue, Alvaston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge and £85 costs for failing to stop drinking in a public place in St Peter's Street, Derby, on September 16, when asked to do so by a police community support officer.

SIMON Banjanin, 25, of Allestree Street, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without insurance and drink-driving in Spondon on July 15.

ALEX Kelsey, 18, of Station Road, Burton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £85 compensation and a £15 victim surcharge for criminal damage in Swadlincote on October 14.

LEE Brown, 33, of Green Lane, Derby, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing tracksuit bottoms and a hat from JD Sports, in Derby, on October 28.

TALIVALDIS Vancans, 54, of St James Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence or failing to give police information relating to the identification of a driver believed to be guilty of an offence, in Ripley on June 17.

RIA-ROSE Smalley, 22, of Drewry Lane, Derby, was given a community order with a drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and ordered to pay costs of £85 for being found in possession of class A drug cocaine and also the class B drug cannabis in Derby on August 10.

DAVID Taylor, 27, of St Mary's Wharf Road, Derby, was given a six-month jail sentence, suspended for 18 months, for stealing a mountain bike, saddle bag and its contents, on October 23. He was ordered to pay £80 victim surcharge.

AMANDA Trowbridge, 46, of Boulton Drive, Alvaston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving without insurance on May 7. Her licence was endorsed with six penalty points.

IAN Glenn Wood, 50, of Margreave Road, Chaddesden, was fined £250, with £25 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving without insurance on July 2. His licence was endorsed with eight penalty points.

LUKE Maltby, 25, of Middleton Avenue, Condor, was fined £300 with £30 victim surcharge and £85 costs and banned for 12 months for drink-driving in Smalley on October 23.

MICHELLE Sentence, 43, of Dale Road, Spondon, was fined £280 with a £38 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and banned for 16 months, for drink-driving, and driving without a correct licence or insurance in Derby on October 23.

JOE McWilliam, 35, of Ash Place, Derby, was given a 10-week jail sentence, suspended for a year, a supervision order, told to pay £16.20 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing meat from Sainsbury's, in Derby, on October 20.

JOHN Stacey, 52, of Richmans Corner Caravan Park, Overseal, was given a community order with supervision requirement, told to pay a £60 surcharge, £85 costs and banned for 12 months for careless driving, failing to stop and failing to report an accident that caused injury to another person, in Swadlincote, on April 1.

FRANCESCA Ward, 24, of Burton Road, Woodville, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 surcharge and £85 costs for stealing toys from B&M Bargains, Swadlincote, on October 29, and damaging the wall of a police cell at St Mary's Wharf, Derby.

JOHN Butler, 25, of Newlyns Close, Church Gresley, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, disqualified from driving for six months, told to pay a £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for driving whilst disqualified and without insurance in Swadlincote on June 13 and July 1.

CLAIRE Hughes, 46, of Ashby Road, Woodville, was given a community order with alcohol treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing vodka from Home Bargains, in Swadlincote, on September 29.

DANIEL Small, 40, of Gerard Street North, Derby, was jailed for 26 weeks for burglary at Park Farm Medical Centre, where he stole a prescription.

CHARLES Cook, 20, of Cranhill Close, Littleover, was jailed for 10 weeks for assault in Long Eaton on March 16.

REBECCA Stephens, of Koppe Close, Moira, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for failing to give police information relating to a driver believed to have been guilty of an offence in Midway on May 17.

KEITH James Plackett, 56, of Wirksworth Road, Ilkeston, was fined £155 with £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving a transit van with defective tyres on July 12. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.

MANDY Louise Keany, 31, of Clifton Road, Ashbourne, was given a community order and told to pay £100 costs, for failing to notify Derbyshire Dales District Council of a change of circumstances which would affect her benefits.

ADAM Megill, 23, of Taverners Crescent, Littleover, was fined £350 with £35 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving without insurance on April 29. His licence was endorsed with eight penalty points.

DOLARS Borcovs, 40, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on July 4.

LEE Doherty, 32, of Langdale Drive, Derby, was fined £200, told to pay £85 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving while using a hand-held mobile phone in Chaddesden on April 16.

ALEX John Priest, 18, of Grosvenor Street, Derby, was fined £100 and told to pay £80 compensation, a £20 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing a fire extinguisher on April 1.

DANIEL Rogers, 29, of Cavendish Road, Long Eaton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £84 compensation, £15 surcharge and £85 costs for stealing 21 packets of bacon from Iceland, Long Eaton, on October 10.

MARTIN Cudworth, 60, of York Street, Derby, was fined £37 with a £20 surcharge and £85 costs for being drunk and disorderly in York Street on October 10.

NICHOLAS Kearney, 52, of Andrews Drive, Langley Mill, was given an eight-week jail term suspended for a year, an alcohol treatment order, told to pay £80 surcharge and £85 costs for harassment on August 28.

PAUL Bramley, 25, of Huntingdon Green, Chaddesden, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay £36.17 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing meat from the Co-op, in Derby, on October 20.

ADRIAN Payne, 34, of Deadmans Lane, Derby, was fined £140 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for criminal damage in Alvaston on May 10.

JAMES Gyongyosi, 29, of Adler Court, Chester Green, was fined £74 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for begging in Albion Street, Derby, on October 20.

ZOE Birkinshaw, 21, of Grasmere Road, Long Eaton, was told to pay £75 compensation for assaulting a police officer in Long Eaton on October 21.

DEANO Dharam, 20, of Cambridge Street, Normanton, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for threatening behaviour in Derby on October 13.

FAHIM Hussain, 24, of Sale Street, Derby, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for possessing class B drug cannabis in Derby on September 28. Magistrates also ordered the destruction of the drug.

RUSSELL Staniland, 35, of Eggesford Road, Stenson Fields, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for possessing class B drug cannabis in Derby on January 30. Magistrates also ordered the destruction of the drug.

DARIUSZ Glabicki, 42, of Haddon Street, Derby, was jailed for 18 weeks for stealing aftershave worth £72 from Debenhams, in Derby, on November 5.

DANIEL Hampson, 18, of High Street, Heanor, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and disqualified from driving for 14 months for drink-driving, driving without insurance and the correct licence in Long Eaton on August 24.

THE following motorists were charged with speeding:

DANIEL Aucott, 25, of Cheribough Road, Castle Donington, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 7. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.

DIANA Carter-Selwood, 39, of Stirling Close, Derby, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 13. She was given three penalty points.

ALLAH Ditta, 50, of Richmond Road, Derby, was fined £120 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

DAVID Downing, 67, of Station Road, Castle Donington was fined £30, with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

KEVIN Hall, 23, of Newport Court, Alvaston, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 6. He was given three penalty points.

ANTHONY Plunton Lennox, 45, of Woodfield Drive, Ripley was fined £120, with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on June 29. He was given four penalty points.

LUKE Partridge, 18, of Belper Road, Ashbourne. was fined £100 with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 8. He was given three penalty points.

JEREMY Regan, 52, of Field Lane, Alvaston, was fined £80 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

MARK Holmes, 61, of Windley, Belper, was fined £40 with £20 surcharge for an offence on April 8.

SIMON Peter Sims, 30, of Rawlinson Avenue, Derby, was fined £40 with £20 surcharge and £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

PATRICK Broderick was fined £600 with a £60 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points for driving above the 50mph limit on Raynesway on April 15, and failing to give information about the identification of a driver believed to have committed an offence in Derby after May 25.

SIMON Green, 41, of Western Road, Mickleover, was fined £400 with a £40 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points for driving above the 40mph limit on Osmaston Park Road, Derby, on April 21.

SIMON Hind, 49, of Foyle Avenue, Chaddesden, was fined £40 with a £40 surcharge and given three points for driving above the 30mph limit in Hampshire Road, Chaddesden, on April 17.

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MICHAEL Conbridge, 35, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 18 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £34.99 compensation for stealing an Arsenal football shirt from Sports Direct, in Derby, on October 25, and a figurine from British Heart Foundation, in Derby, on October 3.

SARAH Edmonds, 24, of Parliament Street, Derby, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £40 costs for stealing clothes from GAP, in Derby, on October 8, while subject to a previous conditional discharge.

KELLY Earp, 33, of Elmsleigh Drive, Midway, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay a 315 victim surcharge and £85 costs for assault in Midway on October 20.

JOSEPH Bosworth, 26, of New Street, Stanley, was fined £247 with a £22 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on his licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on London Road, in Derby, on April 14.

MICHELLE Carlin, 30, of Mill Road, Heanor, was fined £135 with a £20 victim surcharge and £35 costs, and given six penalty points on her licence, for driving without insurance in Ilkeston on May 23.

CHRISTOPHER Holmes, 24, of Critchley Street, Ilkeston, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on his licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Ilkeston on May 23.

KATIE McMahon, 20, of Doveridge Walk, Littleover, was fined £135 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on her licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Ladywood Road, in Kirk Hallam, on July 23.

MATTHEW Smith, 33, of no fixed abode, was jailed for four weeks for threatening behaviour in Langley Mill on November 11.

THE following people have appeared before magistrates charged with using a colour TV without a licence:

SEBASTIAN Sidorczuk, 34, of Lincoln Way, Midway, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between July 29 and August 30.

LISA Simpson, 38, of Monsal Drive, Spondon, was fined £400, with £40 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 27.

GARRY Smith, 33, of Field Court, Kilburn, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 3 and September 4.

VANESSA Stone, 42, of Farmhouse Road, Sinfin, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 12.

MARIE Summers, 42, of Cranmer Street, Long Eaton, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 13.

DAVID John Tallent, 41, of Coupland Place, Somercotes, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 3.

VICTORIA Taylor, 24, of Marsh Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.

GILLIAN Walton, 48, of Glossop Street, Derby, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 9.

ANNETTE Warren, 37, of Grampian Way, Sinfin, was fined £70, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between June 12 and July 13.

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ABDUL Ghani, 46, of Almond Street, Derby, was fined £180 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points for driving in a manner dangerous to passengers by carrying two adult passengers, one baby and four children in one car in Derby on May 28. He was also fined £90 for not wearing a seatbelt.

JAMIE Whitmore, 27, of St Vincent Close, Long Eaton, was fined £200, told to pay £120 costs and £4.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on June 10.

MARK Dunlop, 29, of Mount Carmel Street, Derby, was jailed for six weeks for stealing whisky from Tesco and bolt croppers from Wilkinson, both in Derby, on November 12.

ROBERT Grace, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and told to pay a £15 victim surcharge for begging in Derby on November 3.

ARKADIJS Stepans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 and told to pay £85 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on June 14

BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on October 29.

JULIUS Kovac, 24, of Sutherland Road, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on August 6.

WAZIR Mahroof, 24, of Dairyhouse Road, Derby, was fined £145 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance on July 17.

SATNAM Singh, 26, of Anstey Court, Oakwood, was fined £180, told to pay £35 costs and given nine penalty points on licence for driving without due care and attention and without insurance in Breaston on August 26.

STEVE Shaw, , of Stainsby Avenue, Heanor, was fined £700 with a £70 victim surcharge and told to pay £400 costs for failing to comply with a noticed served by Amber Valley Borough Council requiring him to tidy waste material from his garden between May 30 and September 4.

JAMES Clarke, 23, of Buttermere Close, Long Eaton, was fined £37 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £95 costs and £2.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on July 31.

SHELLEY Comery, 51, of Hexham Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for driving without insurance or an MOT test certificate in Ilkeston on May 19.

THOMAS Green, 24, of Littleover, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 14.

TERRENCE Hall, 25, of Moss Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Allenton on June 13.

LANCE Serra, 34, of Hawthorn Street, Derby, was fined £400 with a £40 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 7.

SHARON Bull, 49, of Talbot Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs, and given six penalty points on licence, for driving without insurance or an MOT test certificate in Derby on June 16.

SIMON Williams-Hunter, 35, of Hastings Road, Swadlincote, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Swadlincote on June 10.

JAMIE Whitmore, 27, of St Vincent Close, Long Eaton, was fined £200, told to pay £120 costs and £4.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on June 10.

MARK Dunlop, 29, of Mount Carmel Street, Derby, was jailed for six weeks for stealing whiskey from Tesco and bolt croppers from Wilkinsons, both in Derby, on November 12.

ROBERT Grace, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and told to pay a £15 victim surcharge for begging in Derby on November 3.

ARKADIJS Stepans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 and told to pay £85 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on June 14

BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on October 29.

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THE following people have all appeared before Southern Derbyshire magistrates charged with using a colour television without a licence:

FRANK Pearson, 69, of Cardigan Street, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on May 16.

CHARLOTTE Phillips, 20, of Humbleton Drive, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between May 10 and June 11.

EMMA Phillips, 27, of Ash Crescent, Ripley, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 3.

PATRICIA Pickering, 43, of Norfolk Road, Long Eaton, was fined £35, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 1.

ANDZELIKA Pomerening, 24, of Whiston Street, Derby, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between September 1 and 13.

OLIVIER Rockley, 20, of Melton Court, Sandiacre, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on July 31.

DEBBIE Rogerson, 47, of Holme Close, Hatton, was fined £110, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 28.

MICHELLE Saglam, 34, of Depedale Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 10.

DEBORAH Scott, 44, of Pear Tree Avenue, Ripley, was fined £93, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £130 costs, for an offence between June 25 and July 26.

------------------------------ The following people have all appeared before Southern Derbyshire magistrates for using a colour television without a licence:

JAMES Morgan, 33, of Stonesdale Court, Alvaston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 3 and September 4.

JESSICA Newsome, 25, of Dawsmere Close, Derby, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.

SONIA Pallett, 50, of Bentley Dale, Hartshorne, was fined £55, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 29.

EMMA Pearson, 41, of Moyne Gardens, Chellaston, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 10 and September 11.

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CHRISTOPHER Knight, 22, of Stanhope Road, Swadlincote, was given a community order and told to attend a drug rehabilitation programme for two months and put under a year's supervision order for stealing a quantity of steak from Sainsbury's, in Newhall, on October 23 and for being in possession of cannabis on October 28 at St Mary's Wharf police station, Derby.

SEAN Brendan O'Reilly, 30, of Ellastone Gardens, Alvaston, was given six weeks' jail suspended for 18 months, a year's supervision order and told to do 120 hours of unpaid work for causing fear of violence and committing an assault. He was also ordered to pay £100 compensation and £85 costs.

LEWIS Alexander, 27, of Crompton Street, Derby, was given a community order and told to do undertake probation activity for 20 hours over 10 days, carry out 80 hours of unpaid work and pay a victim surcharge of £65 and costs of £85 for assault.

PRABJIT Singh Johal, 26, of Eastbrae Road, Sunny Hill, was ordered to comply with a community order and complete a 60-day probation programme. He was also given an 18-month supervision order and told to do unpaid work for 80 hours and pay £65 victim surcharge and £85 costs for assault.

CHRISTOPHER Taylor, 25, of Cummings Street, Derby, was given a community order, told to undertake an employment training programme for five days, put on an 18-month supervision order and told to pay £60 surcharge and £85 costs for assault.

LUKE Tams, 19, Wood Street. Ilkeston, was discharged conditionally for six months and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15 for being in possession of cannabis.

MARCUS Stringer, 28, of Grosvenor Street, Derby, has been ordered to carry out a further seven hours of unpaid work for failing to comply with a community order made on June 11.

OMED Rahman, 33, of Lapwing Close, Sinfin, was fined £55 ordered to pay £50 compensation and £100 costs for assault on June 17.

ASHLEY Hogg, 47, of Parkfields Drive, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, fined £75 and told to pay a £20 victim surcharge and £85 costs, for stealing a Fred Perry jacket from Debenhams and using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour on October 26.

NICHOLAS Stredder, 41, of Wilson Street, Derby, has been given a four-month curfew order between the hours of 5pm and 6am everyday for failing to comply with a community order issued on October 10.

BRIAN Learmouth, 19, of Richmond Road, Derby, was fined £36 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for being drunk and disorderly on November 9.

JAMIE Holmes, 37, of Haddon Way, Long Eaton, was given a community order, with £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for stealing 11 shirts from Peacocks in Ilkeston.

MARK Charlton, 44, of Andrews Drive, Langley Mill, was jailed for four weeks for breaking a restraining order between June 1 and August 15.

THE following people were charged with watching television without a licence.

SHANE Bednall, 24, of Kew Crescent, Heanor, was fined £500 with £50 victim surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between August 4 and September 5.

STACIE Bowring, 24, of Bentley Dale, Hartshorne, was fined £400 with £40 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 13.

MALCOLM Collins, 58, of Knightsbridge, Derby, was fined £35 with £20 surcharge, and £90 costs for an offence on September 13.

KATHY Cooper, 29, of Lower Gladstone Street, Heanor, was fined £80 with £20 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between August 4 and September 5.

EMMA Cope, 38, of Crayford Road, Alvaston, was fined £400 with £40 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between May 14 and June 16.

SOPHIE Corbett, 20, was fined £200 with £20 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on June 25.

LAUREL Degg, 45, of Parks Avenue, South Wingfield, was fined £500 with £50 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 7.

STELLA Dobie, 55, of North Street, Swadlincote, was fined £300 with £30 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 2.

JORDAN Werkowski, 24, of Co-operative Street, Long Eaton, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing a mobile phone on October 24. He was given a further four weeks, to run concurrently, for damaging a door, gate and patio set on August 17 and two further weeks in jail, to run concurrently, for failing to surrender to custody on September 4 and October 31.

RAKESH Chander Kainth, 45, of Rawdon Street, Derby, was jailed for four weeks for stealing meat worth £40 from the Co-op on October 8. He was given a further four weeks, to run consecutively, for stealing meat worth £39.07 from the Co-op on October 12 and four weeks, also consecutively, for stealing meat worth £25.11 from Sainsbury's on November 7.

CRAIG Morgan, 25, of Uttoxeter New Road, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge and told to pay £308 compensation, a £15 surcharge and £85 costs for damaging a car on July 7.

LORRAINE Welsh, 52, of Swinburne Street, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge, with a £15 surcharge and £85 costs, for possessing diazepam on August 12.

ANN Catherine Hallam, 56, of Dryden Street, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for driving while disqualified on July 31. She was banned for a further five months.

MARIO Klyc, 24, of Shaftesbury Crescent, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for drink-driving on October 7. He was disqualified from driving for 40 months.

GARETH Vaughan Thomas, 33, of Epworth Villas, Duffield Road, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, for wasting police time on October 22. No order for costs was made.

AIDEN Charles John Thomason, 21, of Walnut Street, Allenton, was jailed for 21 weeks for assault on August 16.

ARCHIE James West Spencer, 21, of Ash Fields, Belper, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, with £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £1,498 compensation for damaging a door and window on August 29.

RUHULLAH Armani, 22, of Baker Street, Derby, was fined £266, with £26 victim surcharge, and disqualified from driving for six months, for stealing a Vauxhall Astra on September 18. No order for costs was made.

JACQUELINE Ann Keating, 51, of Abington Street, Allenton, was given a four-week jail sentence, suspended for a year, and told to pay £150 compensation for assaulting a police officer on June 22.

PHILLIP Betts, 32, of Station Court, Ilkeston, was given a community order and told to pay £160 compensation, £60 surcharge and £100 costs, for stealing two vacuum cleaners from the Co-op on August 14 and August 16.

GEORGE William Fernley, 20, of Tavistock Close, Stenson Fields, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, with £15 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour on June 15.

LEANNE Marie Peat, 30, of Briar Gate, Long Eaton, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, and told to pay £17.50 compensation and £85 costs, for stealing beer from the Co-op on September 4 and cigarettes from the Co-op on July 28.

PAUL Hallam, 24, of Longfield Lane, Ilkeston, was given a community order and told to pay £48 compensation for stealing make-up from Boots, Ilkeston, on October 24.

SHANE Joseph Keyland, 21, of Galway Avenue, Chaddesden, was jailed for eight weeks for stealing wine from Sainsbury's on October 7 and October 15.

BARRY Wright, 34, of London Road, Alvaston, was jailed for 18 weeks for stealing aftershave from Boots on November 12.

RUSSELL Bannister, 29, of Cantelupe Road, Ilkeston, was given a community order with £60 surcharge and told to pay £100 compensation and £85 costs for assault on July 6.

GARETH John Evans, 46, of Excelsior Drive, Woodville, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 surcharge and told to pay £625 costs for damaging a fence panel on April 10.

DWAYNE Aston Medcalf, 26, of Alleyne Close, Swadlincote, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for drink-driving on August 25. He was banned for 12 months.

MARIAN Magyar, 26, of Hawthorn Street, Derby, was told to pay £20 surcharge and £55 costs for stealing rings from Claire's Accessories on October 25.

ROSE-MARIE Nicholls, 45, of Hayes Avenue, Littleover, was fined £75 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing goods worth £381.54 from Asda. ADNAN Ali Quayum, 31, of Co-operative Street, Normanton, was fined £600, with a £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £600 costs for driving without insurance on March 22. His license was endorsed with six penalty points. SHERYL Easton, 42, of Bedford Street, Derby, was given a two-year conditional discharge, with a £15 victim surcharge, for stealing aftershave on October 27. No order for costs was made. JASON Peersaib, 43, of Addison Road, Allenton, was given an 18-month conditional discharge, with a £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for possessing methylmethcathinone on July 7. TANYA Munyebvu, 34, of Osmaston Road, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge with £15 surcharge, and told to pay £45 compensation and £85 costs for stealing an iPhone on July 27.

NICOLE Lucy Williamson, 27, of The Burrows, Newhall, was fined £110, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for drink driving on October 18. She was disqualified from driving for 18 months.

GEORGE Steven Bramley 21, of Cardigan Street, Chaddesden, was given a community order and told to pay £550 compensation for stealing a bike worth £80, a chainsaw worth £250 and a projector worth £300 between September 28 and October 10. No order for costs was made.

JOHN Astle, 40, of Harvey Road, Derby, was fined £120, with £20 surcharge and £35 costs for using a mobile phone while driving on May 9. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.

STEVEN Frederick Delacy, 58, of Castle Road, Castle Gresley, was fined £240, with £20 surcharge and £35 costs, for driving a vehicle which exceeded its maximum permitted weight on May 15.

BOGUSLAW Laszczynski, 51, of Crayford Road, Alvaston, was fined £65, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving with no MoT on May 12.

GRAHAM Parkin, 25, of Mackenzie Street, Derby, was jailed for 16 weeks for stealing electrical items from TK Maxx, in Derby, on October 25, breaching a conditional discharge.

JONATHAN Croft, 38, of Commerce Street, Derby, was fined £116 with £110 costs and told to pay back duty of £57.09 for having an unlicensed car on a public road on April 3.

LEE Andrew Ginger, of Outram Street, Ripley, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge and £110 costs for failing to notify the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car on February 8.

IAN Vernon, 39, of Wilson Street, Derby, was given a four-week prison sentence, suspended for 12 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge, for stealing perfume from Dazzle on November 7.

TONDERAI Andrew Chinyanda, 42, of Drysdale Road, Mickleover, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £110 costs, for failing to inform the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car in February.

KEVIN Russell, 51, of Burton Road, Derby, was given a community order and told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for wasting police time by giving a false report, in Derby, between January 1 and July 10.

PHILLIP Bennett, 51, of Donington Close, Sinfin, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on October 28.

MARK Friery, 36, of Lynden Avenue, Long Eaton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing aftershave and other items worth £102.67 from Asda on September 14.

ADAM Fulford, 23, of Francis Street, Derby, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for drink-driving on September 4. He was disqualified for three years.

NASAR Khan Mahmood, 33, of Oriel Court, Derby, was given a 12-month community order with £60 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for assault on September 27.

DEX Tenbrink, 26, of Pear Tree Street, Derby, was fined £50, with £20 surcharge, for failing to surrender to custody on October 29.

GEORDIE Boye, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was fined £60, with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for begging in Derby on October 22.

SAMUEL Pepper, 26, of Sitwell Street, Spondon, was fined £300, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 18 months for drink-driving in Derby on August 22.

JASON Bamford, 41, of Golden Valley, Riddings, was given a community order, told to carry out 100 hours' unpaid work, pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs, and disqualified from driving for 23 months for drink-driving in the Assembly Rooms car park, in Derby, on October 13.

JAMES Bainbrigge, 34, of Shelmory Close, Allenton, was given a restraining order and an eight-week jail sentence, suspended for 24 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for harassment in Derby between July 28 and September 17.

LEON Wilks, 20, of Cavendish Street, Derby, was given a community order and told to carry out 80 hours' unpaid work and pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for threatening behaviour in Derby on August 2.

BRANDON Draper, 23, of Little Hallam Lane, Ilkeston, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement and told to pay £250 compensation for burglary and possessing class B drug methylmethcathinone in Ilkeston on October 18. Magistrates ordered the destruction of the drug.

SANDRA Fern, 51, of Cockayne Mews, Ashbourne, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for possessing crack cocaine and diamorphine on May 25.

CHARLOTTE Emma Christine Allen, 26, of Waterford Drive, Chaddesden, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £110 costs, for failing to inform the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car on March 4.

AARON Hall, 25, of Emerson Square, Sunny Hill, was fined £55, with £20 victim surcharge, and must pay £200 costs, for assault on July 1.

SCOTT Thomas Weston, 46, of Cotmanhay Road, Ilkeston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay £85 costs and a £15 victim surcharge for stealing cable worth £50 from Harpbrand Engineers on September 14.

LUKE Alexander Hayward, 27, of Haig Street, Derby, was given a 14-week jail sentence, suspended for 12 months, for stealing a camera worth £309.99 from Argos. He must also pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs.

ANDREW Nicholas Mallett, 55, of Grafham Close, Chellaston, was fined £300, with £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for drink driving on October 10. He was also disqualified from driving for 16 months.

ADEVEMI Omorinove, 38, of May Street, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for failing to stop after an accident on March 17. His licence was endorsed with five penalty points.

MOHAMMED Nawaz, 57, of Leacroft Road, Derby, was fined £50, with a £20 victim surcharge, and ordered to pay £85 costs for possessing cannabis on August 8.

BENJAMIN Robert Cooper, 32, of Winchester Crescent, Chaddesden, was jailed for 16 weeks for assault on August 31. He must also pay £200 costs.

PAUL Foster, 37, of Bailey Street, Normanton, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months for breaching the terms of a previous community order made by magistrates on June 4 for possessing the class B drug methylmethcathinone in Derby on March 22.

RICHARD Pepper, 24, of Chadwick Avenue, Allenton, was jailed for four weeks for failing to comply with the terms of a community order made by magistrates on September 29 for criminal damage and assault in Derby on June 29.

ADAM Thorpe, 24, of Cardean Close, Chester Green, was jailed for eight weeks for failing to comply with the terms of a community order made by magistrates on July 24 for assault in Derby on July 7.

DAVID Mosley, 25, of Hexham Walk, Derby, had a community order made by magistrates on June 4 altered to include an alcohol treatment requirement.

SINEAD Thomson, 20, of Charnwood Street, Derby, was fined £150 for failing to abide by licence conditions by reporting to a supervising officer on August 15.

STEVEN Chand, 25, of Beeches Street, Derby, was given a restraining order, fined £150 and told to pay £275 costs for assault in Derby on August 12.

BRETT Traynor, 32, of Hartington Street, Derby, was fined £50, with a £20 victim surcharge, for possessing cannabis on August 20.

MOHAMMED Hassan, 30, of Whitaker Street, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with a £15 victim surcharge and ordered to pay £600 costs for assault on July 26.

MICHAEL Falconbridge, 35, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing aftershave from Debenhams on October 11.

CLIVE Beatty, 53, of Albion Street, Derby, was fined £50 with a £20 victim surcharge for begging in the street on October 8.

MICHAEL Beeson, 56, of Deborah Drive, Chaddesden, was given a community order, told to carry out 80 hours' unpaid work and must pay £50 compensation, a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for touching a girl under 16 in a sexual way in Derby on September 18.

STEPHEN Gallacher, 23, of Quarn Way, Derby, was given a community order with drug treatment, told to carry out 100 hours' unpaid work and must pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for possessing cocaine and cannabis in Derby on August 10. Magistrates ordered the destruction of the drugs.

PERRY Davis, 24, of Crewe Street, Derby, was jailed for 28 days for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on October 10.

LINZIE Grey, 28, of Starthe Bank, Heanor, was given a community order with supervision requirement and told to pay £200 compensation for damaging a car in Ilkeston on May 28.

VILIS Kozlovskis, 30, of Twyford Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to carry out 150 hours unpaid work, told to pay £85 costs and an £80 victim surcharge and was disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving while disqualified and without insurance in Derby on October 9.

TRISTAN Berridge, 38, of Thorndike Avenue, Alvaston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge and £85 costs for failing to stop drinking in a public place in St Peter's Street, Derby, on September 16, when asked to do so by a police community support officer.

SIMON Banjanin, 25, of Allestree Street, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without insurance and drink-driving in Spondon on July 15.

ALEX Kelsey, 18, of Station Road, Burton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £85 compensation and a £15 victim surcharge for criminal damage in Swadlincote on October 14.

LEE Brown, 33, of Green Lane, Derby, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing tracksuit bottoms and a hat from JD Sports, in Derby, on October 28.

VILIS Kozlovskis, 30, of Twyford Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to carry out 150 hours unpaid work, told to pay £85 costs and an £80 victim surcharge and was disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving while disqualified and without insurance in Derby on October 9.

TRISTAN Berridge, 38, of Thorndike Avenue, Alvaston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge and £85 costs for failing to stop drinking in a public place in St Peter's Street, Derby, on September 16, when asked to do so by a police community support officer.

SIMON Banjanin, 25, of Allestree Street, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without insurance and drink-driving in Spondon on July 15.

ALEX Kelsey, 18, of Station Road, Burton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £85 compensation and a £15 victim surcharge for criminal damage in Swadlincote on October 14.

LEE Brown, 33, of Green Lane, Derby, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing tracksuit bottoms and a hat from JD Sports, in Derby, on October 28.

TALIVALDIS Vancans, 54, of St James Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence or failing to give police information relating to the identification of a driver believed to be guilty of an offence, in Ripley on June 17.

RIA-ROSE Smalley, 22, of Drewry Lane, Derby, was given a community order with a drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and ordered to pay costs of £85 for being found in possession of class A drug cocaine and also the class B drug cannabis in Derby on August 10.

DAVID Taylor, 27, of St Mary's Wharf Road, Derby, was given a six-month jail sentence, suspended for 18 months, for stealing a mountain bike, saddle bag and its contents, on October 23. He was ordered to pay £80 victim surcharge.

AMANDA Trowbridge, 46, of Boulton Drive, Alvaston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving without insurance on May 7. Her licence was endorsed with six penalty points.

IAN Glenn Wood, 50, of Margreave Road, Chaddesden, was fined £250, with £25 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving without insurance on July 2. His licence was endorsed with eight penalty points.

LUKE Maltby, 25, of Middleton Avenue, Condor, was fined £300 with £30 victim surcharge and £85 costs and banned for 12 months for drink-driving in Smalley on October 23.

MICHELLE Sentence, 43, of Dale Road, Spondon, was fined £280 with a £38 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and banned for 16 months, for drink-driving, and driving without a correct licence or insurance in Derby on October 23.

JOE McWilliam, 35, of Ash Place, Derby, was given a 10-week jail sentence, suspended for a year, a supervision order, told to pay £16.20 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing meat from Sainsbury's, in Derby, on October 20.

JOHN Stacey, 52, of Richmans Corner Caravan Park, Overseal, was given a community order with supervision requirement, told to pay a £60 surcharge, £85 costs and banned for 12 months for careless driving, failing to stop and failing to report an accident that caused injury to another person, in Swadlincote, on April 1.

FRANCESCA Ward, 24, of Burton Road, Woodville, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 surcharge and £85 costs for stealing toys from B&M Bargains, Swadlincote, on October 29, and damaging the wall of a police cell at St Mary's Wharf, Derby.

JOHN Butler, 25, of Newlyns Close, Church Gresley, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, disqualified from driving for six months, told to pay a £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for driving whilst disqualified and without insurance in Swadlincote on June 13 and July 1.

CLAIRE Hughes, 46, of Ashby Road, Woodville, was given a community order with alcohol treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing vodka from Home Bargains, in Swadlincote, on September 29.

DANIEL Small, 40, of Gerard Street North, Derby, was jailed for 26 weeks for burglary at Park Farm Medical Centre, where he stole a prescription.

CHARLES Cook, 20, of Cranhill Close, Littleover, was jailed for 10 weeks for assault in Long Eaton on March 16.

REBECCA Stephens, of Koppe Close, Moira, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for failing to give police information relating to a driver believed to have been guilty of an offence in Midway on May 17.

KEITH James Plackett, 56, of Wirksworth Road, Ilkeston, was fined £155 with £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving a transit van with defective tyres on July 12. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.

MANDY Louise Keany, 31, of Clifton Road, Ashbourne, was given a community order and told to pay £100 costs, for failing to notify Derbyshire Dales District Council of a change of circumstances which would affect her benefits.

ADAM Megill, 23, of Taverners Crescent, Littleover, was fined £350 with £35 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving without insurance on April 29. His licence was endorsed with eight penalty points.

DOLARS Borcovs, 40, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on July 4.

LEE Doherty, 32, of Langdale Drive, Derby, was fined £200, told to pay £85 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving while using a hand-held mobile phone in Chaddesden on April 16.

ALEX John Priest, 18, of Grosvenor Street, Derby, was fined £100 and told to pay £80 compensation, a £20 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing a fire extinguisher on April 1.

DANIEL Rogers, 29, of Cavendish Road, Long Eaton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £84 compensation, £15 surcharge and £85 costs for stealing 21 packets of bacon from Iceland, Long Eaton, on October 10.

MARTIN Cudworth, 60, of York Street, Derby, was fined £37 with a £20 surcharge and £85 costs for being drunk and disorderly in York Street on October 10.

NICHOLAS Kearney, 52, of Andrews Drive, Langley Mill, was given an eight-week jail term suspended for a year, an alcohol treatment order, told to pay £80 surcharge and £85 costs for harassment on August 28.

PAUL Bramley, 25, of Huntingdon Green, Chaddesden, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay £36.17 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing meat from the Co-op, in Derby, on October 20.

ADRIAN Payne, 34, of Deadmans Lane, Derby, was fined £140 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for criminal damage in Alvaston on May 10.

JAMES Gyongyosi, 29, of Adler Court, Chester Green, was fined £74 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for begging in Albion Street, Derby, on October 20.

ZOE Birkinshaw, 21, of Grasmere Road, Long Eaton, was told to pay £75 compensation for assaulting a police officer in Long Eaton on October 21.

DEANO Dharam, 20, of Cambridge Street, Normanton, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for threatening behaviour in Derby on October 13.

FAHIM Hussain, 24, of Sale Street, Derby, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for possessing class B drug cannabis in Derby on September 28. Magistrates also ordered the destruction of the drug.

RUSSELL Staniland, 35, of Eggesford Road, Stenson Fields, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for possessing class B drug cannabis in Derby on January 30. Magistrates also ordered the destruction of the drug.

DARIUSZ Glabicki, 42, of Haddon Street, Derby, was jailed for 18 weeks for stealing aftershave worth £72 from Debenhams, in Derby, on November 5.

DANIEL Hampson, 18, of High Street, Heanor, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and disqualified from driving for 14 months for drink-driving, driving without insurance and the correct licence in Long Eaton on August 24.

THE following motorists were charged with speeding:

DANIEL Aucott, 25, of Cheribough Road, Castle Donington, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 7. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.

DIANA Carter-Selwood, 39, of Stirling Close, Derby, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 13. She was given three penalty points.

ALLAH Ditta, 50, of Richmond Road, Derby, was fined £120 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

DAVID Downing, 67, of Station Road, Castle Donington was fined £30, with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

KEVIN Hall, 23, of Newport Court, Alvaston, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 6. He was given three penalty points.

ANTHONY Plunton Lennox, 45, of Woodfield Drive, Ripley was fined £120, with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on June 29. He was given four penalty points.

LUKE Partridge, 18, of Belper Road, Ashbourne. was fined £100 with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 8. He was given three penalty points.

JEREMY Regan, 52, of Field Lane, Alvaston, was fined £80 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

MARK Holmes, 61, of Windley, Belper, was fined £40 with £20 surcharge for an offence on April 8.

SIMON Peter Sims, 30, of Rawlinson Avenue, Derby, was fined £40 with £20 surcharge and £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.

PATRICK Broderick was fined £600 with a £60 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points for driving above the 50mph limit on Raynesway on April 15, and failing to give information about the identification of a driver believed to have committed an offence in Derby after May 25.

SIMON Green, 41, of Western Road, Mickleover, was fined £400 with a £40 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points for driving above the 40mph limit on Osmaston Park Road, Derby, on April 21.

SIMON Hind, 49, of Foyle Avenue, Chaddesden, was fined £40 with a £40 surcharge and given three points for driving above the 30mph limit in Hampshire Road, Chaddesden, on April 17.

-------------------------------------------------

MICHAEL Conbridge, 35, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 18 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £34.99 compensation for stealing an Arsenal football shirt from Sports Direct, in Derby, on October 25, and a figurine from British Heart Foundation, in Derby, on October 3.

SARAH Edmonds, 24, of Parliament Street, Derby, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £40 costs for stealing clothes from GAP, in Derby, on October 8, while subject to a previous conditional discharge.

KELLY Earp, 33, of Elmsleigh Drive, Midway, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay a 315 victim surcharge and £85 costs for assault in Midway on October 20.

JOSEPH Bosworth, 26, of New Street, Stanley, was fined £247 with a £22 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on his licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on London Road, in Derby, on April 14.

MICHELLE Carlin, 30, of Mill Road, Heanor, was fined £135 with a £20 victim surcharge and £35 costs, and given six penalty points on her licence, for driving without insurance in Ilkeston on May 23.

CHRISTOPHER Holmes, 24, of Critchley Street, Ilkeston, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on his licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Ilkeston on May 23.

KATIE McMahon, 20, of Doveridge Walk, Littleover, was fined £135 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on her licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Ladywood Road, in Kirk Hallam, on July 23.

MATTHEW Smith, 33, of no fixed abode, was jailed for four weeks for threatening behaviour in Langley Mill on November 11.

Who's been in the courts?

Opposition mounts to 250-homes plan for Spondon 'green-wedge' site

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RESIDENTS in a Derby village are becoming increasingly worried by controversial plans for 250 homes on "green-wedge" land. A developer has applied to Derby City Council for outline planning permission for the houses at Acorn Way in Spondon and the authority will now decide whether to consider it. The application has received 88 objections and only two from supporters. Acorn Way development sits on "green-wedge" land which council documents describe as intended to "penetrate the urban area and provide an uninterrupted link to the countryside". Residents in neighbouring Chaddesden are also angry about the proposals. In a letter of objection to Derby City Council, Sarah and Stephen James, of Oregon Way, Chaddesden, said: "We have concerns over increased traffic. "Having a large Asda superstore on Derby Road already adds to the amount of traffic using this road. "The extra volume of traffic would surely result in an increase in noise pollution.'' Derek Hathaway, a Spondon resident for 43 years, said he hoped the application would not reach the committee. Dave Hayes, a volunteer at West Park Meadow nature reserve, said wildlife would be discouraged from visiting the centre if the application won the go-ahead. He said: "People are waiting to see if it goes to the committee and I'd be surprised if it doesn't. It has the potential for adverse and negative effects." Councillor Evonne Williams said she would be surprised to see the application go to the planning committee. She said: "The area should be kept as green-wedge land and not used for housing developments. "In Spondon we've had 700 homes built in the last five years, so we're not opposed to new housing, it's just this site. It needs to be the right place for people. Green space should be for kids to enjoy. "Most other residents have the same concerns and we are not anti-housing." The ''green-wedge'' argument is one of the residents' main worries. Traffic congestion and school places are other areas of concern. Mrs Williams said: "The traffic situation is a nightmare. If we have 250 homes most of the families will have more than two cars, so that will create more congestion.'' A spokesman for the developers, British and Continental Co Ltd, said: "Two of the three directors at the company have links with Spondon and Chaddesden and we're confident the scheme will benefit the local area. "This will be through sustaining local jobs, shops and with future residents getting involved in the local community."

Opposition mounts to 250-homes plan for Spondon ‘green-wedge’ site

CCTV image released in connection with racial abuse allegation in Derby

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POLICE have issued this CCTV image of a man to whom they would like to speak in connection with an allegation of racial abuse in Derby. A Trent Barton bus was stopped at traffic lights outside the Holiday Inn on the Morledge. As the driver was pulling off in traffic, a man walked out in front of him. The bus driver sounded his horn and stopped the bus. The man became racially abusive to the driver and an altercation ensued. The man was described as white with short unkempt brown hair and was approximately 5ft 7ins tall. He was wearing a red jacket, blue jeans and was in his late-40s. He was also carrying two orange Sainsbury's carrier bags. The incident happened on August 28 but police have only now released the image. Anyone who has any information relating to this incident is asked to contact PC 3299 Hayhurst on 101.

CCTV image released in connection with racial abuse allegation in Derby

Mobile speed camera locations in Derbyshire for week commencing December 16

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MOBILE speed cameras will be in force along the following routes from Monday, December 16 to Sunday, December 22. A516 Uttoxeter Road, Derby A515 Buxton Road, North of Ashbourne A6 Rowsley to Bakewell A6007 Codnor to Heanor B6179 Denby A617 Bramley Vale B600 Nottingham Road, Alfreton A57 Snake Road, Ladybower A617 Bramley Vale A623 Stoney Middleton to Peak Forest A514 Swadlincote A6 Allestree A6 London Road, Derby A6 Ashford in the Water A623 Peak Forest to Barmoor Clough A615 Tansley to Wessington A5004 Long Hill, near Fernilee A52 Ashbourne Road, Derby B6039 Chesterfield Road, Holmewood, Chesterfield

Mobile speed camera locations in Derbyshire for week commencing December 16

3,000 sign petition to save Raj restaurant in Allestree

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MORE than 3,000 people have signed petitions against plans to turn a popular Derby restaurant into a shop. The Raj restaurant has been running in a building in Kedleston Road, Allestree, owned by Midlands Co-operative since 1996. But, in November, the owner was told the Co-operative wanted to turn the building into a shop. Now customers and friends of the restaurant, which employs 15 people, have launched a massive campaign calling on the city council to reject a planning application for work to make the change. So far, more than 1,100 people have signed an online petition and manager Freddy Ahmed says the total including those on paper petitions is more than 3,000. He said: "When they told us what was planned, it was a big shock. We have spent an awful lot of money on this restaurant and now was the time that we were hoping to make that back. "It would take ages to recover the money (if we moved). It's not like you go elsewhere and all the customers follow you there. It would take time to build it up again. There's no guarantee people would keep their jobs." He said new additions to the restaurant since it opened had included a kitchen, bar, and baking area. Among those making comments on the online petition was Kat Clifford, who said: "What do we need three Co-ops in Allestree for? Keep it as it is!" And Chris May, who works at the Markeaton Pub, Kedleston Road, said: "A lot of our regulars choose to drink at the pub before going for a curry. If it closes, I worry that the pub will lose custom." Mr Ahmed said negotiations with the Co-operative were still ongoing and he was still "hopeful" it would change its mind. The lease came to an end in 2009 but the Co-operative said the Raj could stay put. A spokesman from Midlands Co-operative said: "We are currently in discussions regarding the Allestree site. "As a result of our decision not to renew his lease, the owner will be entitled to substantial statutory compensation to assist him with relocating to alternative premises. "We are aware that he has a following in the area and hope that he will be able to re-establish his business and serve the local community." The planning application for the work is currently due to be decided on January 22 and also has 27 letters of objection against it. A document as part of the application says the change would see the building turned into a new "3,385 sq ft convenience store for Midlands Co-op, comprising 2,200 sq ft sales floor and 1,185 sq ft associated back of house". The organisation wants to install a new shop front, ATM and two staff parking bays. The document adds: "In terms of the overall design, the proposals will have little if any effect on the overall appearance."

3,000 sign petition to save Raj restaurant in Allestree

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