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Super Sutherland stages remarkable comeback

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A GALASHIELS footballer has scored a spectacular hat-trick just weeks after suffering a serious hip injury, writes Kenny Paterson.

Des Sutherland came off the bench to secure a 3-1 win for Gala Rovers over Leithen Rovers in a Border Amateur League Division A game on Thursday night.

Team-mates feared the roofer would not play again this season when he was admitted to Borders General Hospital earlier this month with the serious injury.

He had started his recovery after being released from the BGH on August 11, and was included in the Gala squad for the trip to Innerleithen, but was not expected to play.

However, with Gala 1-0 down to an Alan McMath goal, Sutherland came on with 20 minutes remaining.

His scored his first within minutes of being on the pitch, added a penalty and then completed the hat-trick in the final minutes of the match.

Leithen Rovers co-manager Craig Lowrie praised Sutherland’s feat.

Lowrie said: “I spoke to Des at the start of the game and I asked if he would be playing and he said ‘Nah, probably not’.

“But massive respect to Des. To go through what he has and then just weeks later score a hat-trick in 20 minutes is incredible.

“I was co-manager of Gala Rovers last season and know what a talent Des is. Despite the result, it is great to see him back.”


Further investigations

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A HAWICK man has denied injuring a woman with intent to rape her.

Graeme Cook, 38, of Allars Bank, pleaded not guilty to assaulting the woman and biting her at a house in Hawick on January 6.

The case was continued for a week for further investigations.

Passenger thought she was going to die

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AN UNINSURED driver with just a provisional licence was involved in a night-time police chase in the Windyknowe area of Galashiels.

A female passenger in Ashley Powell’s car thought she was going to be killed due to the dangerous nature of the 20-year-old’s driving.

He pleaded guilty to driving with no insurance and dangerous driving, and was fined a total of £600 as well as being banned for 12 months at Selkirk Sheriff Court on Monday.

Powell, of Riddell Dumble Park, Galashiels, committed the offences in Windyknowe Road and Mossilee Road on June 7.

Depute procurator fiscal Tessa Bradley said the vehicle belonged to his partner’s mother.

She explained: “He picked up a number of friends from addresses in the Galashiels area. He ended up with four passengers in the Ford Fiesta car.

“He decided to go with the friends to Purves Garage and the car was spotted by a mobile police patrol who decided to instigate an insurance check.

“On seeing the police car the car headed up Windyknowe Road with the accused saying to his passengers, ‘If they follow us I am flooring it’.

“The blue lights were activated by the police vehicle, but there was no response. It was followed up by the flashing of lights and indicators, and the passengers were saying to the accused to slow down or stop.

“But he started to pull away from the police and the passengers were saying it was dangerous.”

The prosecutor continued: “The car was going at over 45mph and the vehicle travelled to the end of Windyknowe Road to its junction with Mossilee Road.

“He drove right across the junction at speed without giving way, mounted the nearside pavement and went into a skid. There was a near miss with a wall.”

Ms Bradley added: “One of the passengers later told police she thought she was going to die.

“The accused drove at excessive speed in Mossilee Road with the passengers saying to stop and the police decided to back off.

“When he got to Riddell Dumble Park, where he lived, he jumped out of the driving seat and went into the back garden with the passengers left sitting in the car.

“The accused then made his escape. At 2.30am he came back to his home address and the mother phoned the police.”

Defence lawyer Matt Patrick admitted: “This could have had tragic consequences.

“He made a terrible decision to drive the car in the first place and then made a series of terrible decisions.”

The solicitor said: “He has held a provisional licence for three years and just passed his theory test recently.”

Mr Patrick added his client was about to start a sport and fitness college course and was currently a part-time supermarket worker.

Sheriff Kevin Drummond said the dangers of young uninsured drivers acting recklessly were well known.

In addition to the 12-month disqualification and fines, Powell was ordered to resit the extended driving test.

Council dodges poll tax question

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Scotland’s cash-strapped councils are set to write off hundreds of millions of pounds in unpaid poll tax when the debts “expire” next year, writes Sandy Neil.

But Scottish Borders Council (SBC) is yet to confirm whether it will pursue the £150,000 still owed to it since the poll tax was replaced in 1993.

Scottish local authorities are still owed more than £320million from people who refused to pay the controversial community charge (poll tax) introduced in 1989 by the Conservative Government led by Margaret Thatcher.

A 1998 Scottish Office report showed the estimated outstanding poll tax debt was £503million. Fourteen years later the amount outstanding from the 27 Scottish councils which replied to freedom of information requests was £322,753,870.

The outstanding poll tax still owed to SBC stands at £147,016, a council spokesperson revealed to TheSouthern.

But he admitted he had “not been able to get a straight-forward answer on whether we would write it off”.

Furthermore, he added: “I’m under the impression we already have written off some of the debt.”

Four local authorities have already given up chasing the poll tax owed, including Inverclyde, which cancelled £6million of debt last year. Argyll and Bute Council last year collected only £174 of the £3.4million still owed, and South Lanarkshire clawed back just £31,409 of the £30.9 million due.

In Edinburgh, council chiefs are owed more than £72 million, but collected just £65,838 last year. Glasgow City Council alone is owed £125 million, but stopped pursuing debts seven years ago as recovery costs were so high. Other local authorities are preparing to write off the bulk of the outstanding debts when they expire in 2013.

Next year marks the 20th anniversary of the highly unpopular poll tax being replaced by the council tax. Under Scots Law, the milestone means that any outstanding payments will automatically be written off. In England, most poll tax debt was written off more than seven years ago.

Campaigners have called on the Scottish Government to write off the debts now, warning it is becoming too expensive to pursue them. But critics attacked councils for letting tens of thousands of dodgers off the hook, and for not attempting to recoup every penny, when they are cutting spending on roads, schools and bin collections to try to balance the books.

Eben Wilson, director of campaign group TaxpayerScotland, said: “Clearly, taxpayers who paid their tax have since subsidised the debts owed by those who have not paid. This sort of shambles shows that high taxation rates that change behaviour are highly unfair to the law-abiding. Poll tax may appear to be historic now, but high council tax rates also lead to more and more evasion.”

Alan McIntosh, a former anti-poll tax campaigner, said: “It is unfair that some councils have written off these debts but others are still pursuing them. We have an SNP administration which campaigned against the poll tax, but has done nothing about the debt since it got into power.”

A spokesman for the council umbrella group Cosla said: “What needs to be remembered is that there is a hard core group who go out of their way not to pay. We are talking about unpaid as opposed to uncollected – there’s a massive difference between the two.”

The poll tax was introduced as a replacement to the rates tax system in Scotland from 1989, and England and Wales from 1990, in order to part-fund local government. It provided for a single flat-rate per-capita tax on every adult, at a rate set by the local authority.

The new charge inspired a series of mass protests and disturbances called the Poll Tax Riots in British towns and cities. By far the largest occurred in central London on March 31, 1990, shortly before the tax was due to come into force in England and Wales. The riots contributed to the downfall of Margaret Thatcher, who resigned as Prime Minister in November the same year, defending a tax which an opinion poll had found 12 per cent favoured.

The next Prime Minister, John Major, announced it would be abolished in 1993.

Cash up for grabs

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NEARLY £1,000 remains out of £10,000 of public money earmarked for community projects in the Ettrick and Yarrow valleys.

The cash is part of the two-year £60,000 valleys regeneration project – due to end in March –funded by Leader and supported by Buccleuch Estates and the Southern Uplands Partnership (SUP).

Project officer Julie Nock said: “We’ve had a lot of applications from Ettrickbridge, but I would like to see applications from Yarrowford, Yarrow Feus, Cappercleuch and the head of Ettrick.”

For more information, ring Julie on 01750 23760 or email Julie@sup.org.uk.

Smashed window

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A KELSO youth appeared from custody and admitted smashing a window at his former partner’s home.

Twenty-year-old Darrell Wyper, of Inchmyre, admitted losing his temper during the bust-up with his ex-girlfriend on Wednesday afternoon last week. He then lashed out and smashed the double-glazed window pane at the house in Priors Court, Kelso.

Sheriff Derrick McIntyre deferred sentence until September 21 to allow the cost of the damage to be confirmed. He released Wyper on bail with the condition that he must not enter Priors Court.

How to be a student

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SENIOR pupils are invited to an open day to learn more about college and university at the Border Union showground in Kelso today.

More than 30 organisations will provide information and advice to prospective students and their parents at the free Skills Development Scotland’s (SDS) Higher Education Convention, which is open from 10am to noon and 1pm to 3pm.

Most Scottish universities, Borders College and representatives from mainly Northern England colleges and universities will be on hand with information on courses, accommodation and funding. SDS careers advisers will also be there to provide impartial, one-on-one, advice and information

For those unable to attend SDS suggests logging on to its www.myworldofwork.co.uk for information on courses and applications plus tips on adapting to life on campus.

Denials

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A GALASHIELS man appeared from custody and denied committing three offences.

John Campbell Ure, 37, pleaded not guilty to behaving in a threatening and abusive manner at his home in Woodstock Avenue on Sunday. He is also accused of throwing a drink and a container of protein powder over a woman, and spitting on a police constable.

The trial was fixed for October 17 with an intermediate hearing on September 19.


Possession of knife

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A GALASHIELS man admitted being in possession of a knife in the town centre on Christmas Eve.

Twenty-two-year-old Liam Brown, of Gala Park Court, pleaded guilty on indictment to the offence.

Sheriff Kevin Drummond said it was a public safety issue.

But defence lawyer Iain Burke pointed out the case was more about a disproportionate response to the situation Brown was involved in and that he would be arguing against the Crown Office’s call for prison sentences for such offences.

Sentence was deferred until October 8 for the preparation of background reports.

Jacob leaps at film opportunity

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Stunt horseman Jacob Martin from Lanton, Jedburgh appears in the forthcoming $100million Hollywood blockbuster, Cloud Atlas, directed by the

team behind the Matrix films.

The horse cabaret performer with Les Amis d’Onno, pictured during a demonstration at Spittal, Berwick-upon-Tweed, is part of the stunt team and is thrown from a roof. Starring Tom Hanks, Halle Berry and Hugh Grant, the film will be in UK cinemas early next year.

Photograph: Lisa Cowan

Booze thief behind bars after 78th dishonesty crime

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A SERIAL alcohol thief has been jailed for four months after clocking up his 78th conviction for dishonesty.

Daniel Hamilton, 23 – described as an alcoholic since he was 12 years old – was arrested on Wednesday evening last week after stealing eight cans of lager from Tweedbank Late Shop.

He appeared from custody the following day and also pleaded guilty to stealing two bottles of wine from Sainsbury’s in Selkirk on August 5.

Prosecutor Graham Fraser said Hamilton, of Buccleuch Road, Selkirk, had a number of cases outstanding and was already subject to a court order banning him from licensed premises. He explained: “He has something like 76 previous convictions for dishonesty, 21 offences committed while on bail and 14 breaches of an ASBO [antisocial beahviour order].”

The value of the drink in both cases was about £10.

Mr Fraser added: “I do not know whether it is compulsion or desperation, but he is a regular offender. He is not under control for his behaviour. Even as recently as a week past Monday, there was a court order for him to be kept out of licensed premises and he is here again.”

Matt Patrick, defending, said: “His record is terrible. He has been an alcoholic since he was 12 years old. It is quite a worrying tale. He has been drinking for the past 10 years. He has a compulsion to drink. He has to stop drinking.”

Mr Patrick added that there were a number of cases in the system for Hamilton, but he wanted the matter dealt with that day to get it out of the way.

Sheriff Derrick McIntyre said he was surprised Hamilton was still alive, given his alcohol intake.

For each of the thefts he imposed jail sentences of four months, to run concurrently. The other cases are due to call on October 15, but the Crown indicated it was now likely to accelerate matters.

Rape charge

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A 31-year-old man made a private court appearance charged with rape.

Lee Borthwick, of Kelso, is accused of carrying out the offence at a house in the town in July 2011.

He made no plea or declaration and the case was continued for further examination at Jedburgh Sheriff Court. Borthwick was granted bail by Sheriff Derrick McIntyre.

November trial date

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Mark Brodie, 30, of Blythbank Farm, West Linton, is accused of driving dangerously at excessive speed on the A701 and Main Street, West Linton, on March 22.

He will stand trial on November 27.

Shoe strike

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A HAWICK teenager who injured a police constable by striking him in the face with a shoe has been fined £150.

Eighteen-year-old Sabrina Budge had been of good behaviour for the past 12 months after admitting the assault in Hawick’s Common Haugh in August 2011.

Procurator fiscal Graham Fraser said the attack happened at 6pm when Budge, of Hillend Drive, was in possession of a large bottle of cider.

Fined £510

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A FARM labourer who had a row with his pregnant girlfriend was fined a total of £510.

Shaun Grieve kicked out and put a hole in the door of a property in Priors Court, Kelso, on July 11. Three days later he was picked up by police in Kelso being carried in a vehicle driven by someone who did not have the owner’s consent.

Grieve, of Inchmyre, Kelso, was fined £200 for the vandalism and £310 for the motoring offence, as well as having eight penalty points placed on his licence.


Man pays the price for threats to GP over vet’s bill

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A DOCTOR was threatened by a neighbour who claimed that the GP’s dog had injured his cat.

James Sutherland waved a vet’s bill and demanded the alarmed doctor pay the fee by confronting him in his garden. When the doctor asked him to leave, the aggressive 24-year-old told him and his partner that he would smash up their car in revenge. He made threats to the couple on two occasions at their home in Lee Brae, Galashiels, on August 8 and last Friday.

When Sutherland was taken to Galashiels police station and heard the doctor had complained about the threats, he told officers: “That’s it, he is going to get it when I get out.” Sheriff Kevin Drummond highlighted how Sutherland, who is now of no fixed abode, was on a community payback order, deferred sentence and an ASBO (antisocial behaviour order) at the time of the offences.

Sutherland was jailed for four months.

Dad called police over his son’s behaviour

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A TEENAGER who admitted threatening and abusive behaviour towards his parents had sentence deferred for six months.

Gregor Cranston, 18, returned to the family home in Glenfield Road East, Galashiels, but was “extremely drunk and rambling incoherently”.

He then began shouting and swearing at his father, punching out in the air and pulling off his T-shirt.

Eventually the father went outside and called police due to his son’s behaviour, and threatening and abusive manner.

The teenager’s solicitor, Greg McDonnel, said: “He is deeply ashamed of his behaviour. The family have been very supportive and his father is in court.”

Mr McDonnel went on: “He needs to take control of his own life.”

But Sheriff Kevin Drummond said Cranston had been drinking alcohol since he was 14 and was drinking daily, and had been causing problems in the family home for a long time.

He said: “You have been making people’s lives a misery and now you have moved into crime. Either you can stop it or I can stop it.”

Sheriff Drummond deferred sentence until February 25 for good behaviour.

No plea

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A MOTORIST stopped in Lintburn Place, Galashiels, on Sunday has been accused of failing to tell police the identity of the driver of a vehicle.

Robert Moir, 45, of Bluebell Way, South Shields, is further charged with failing to provide two specimens of breath at Galashiels police station.

The case was continued without plea until September 3.

Ride to the hills

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FORMER racehorse trainer Rhona Elliot hosts the last “walk, run or ride” fundraiser to be held at The Yett next month.

Horse riders, runners and hikers have the chance to cover 10 miles following flags (or a shorter route for lead-rein ponies) in the Cheviot Hills south of Hownam to raise money for the MS Borders branch and the British Horse Society on Sunday, September 16.

Runners will start at 10am, paying £10 if they sign up beforehand or £12 on the day, while walkers and riders will pay £15 in advance or £20 on the day.

The entry fee includes a hog roast and refreshments afterwards

Anyone wanting to take part should contact Karen Wardrop at karenwardrop@btinternet.com or on 07813 859365.

Bhatia hits out over councillors’ cross-border ‘booze cruise’ idea

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COUNCILLORS over the border have been branded “irresponsible” after describing Scotland’s imminent minimum pricing on alcohol as a “golden opportunity’.

Northumberland County Council’s Labour Group is reported as wondering if it should promote ‘booze cruise’ type visits to its neighbours over the border when the legislation comes into force in Scotland next year.

But, Councillor Catriona Bhatia, a non-executive director of Borders NHS Board, this week slammed the councillors over the border.

“The statements by the Councillors from south of the Border are frankly irresponsible. Similar words were said to encourage people across the Border when the smoking ban in public places was introduced in Scotland, but England soon followed our lead in implementing this important public health measure, and I am sure it will only be a matter of time before alcohol prices are equalised cross border as this misplaced opportunism is curtailed.”

And Dr Eric Baijal, Joint Director of Public Health NHS Borders and Scottish Borders Council and chairman of the Borders Alcohol & Drugs Partnership, said: “My professional view is that there is strong evidence that the price of alcohol is related to how much people drink. In Scotland the death rate associated with alcohol has more than doubled since the 1980s.

“The Minimum Pricing Bill is an opportunity to reduce both harm to individuals and their families associated with misuse of alcohol, but also to wider society in terms of increased burden on services such as Accident and Emergency departments, Fire Service and Police.”

“It would be disappointing if this effective public health measure were used to gain profits for businesses at the expense of other people’s health. I appreciate there may be a different political view.”

The Scottish government is introducing minimum pricing for alcohol next year in a bid to cut the nation’s binge drinking.

From April, one unit of alcohol will cost a minimum of 50p in Scotland, meaning a basic bottle of wine will be £4.70 compared with England, where it is around £3.50.

Last week the BBC reported Northumberland County Council’s Labour Group as describing it as a “golden opportunity” to boost spending in the county’s towns.

And yesterday group leader Grant Davey defended his position to TheSouthern.

“We suggested this way back in February, we said then the introduction of minimum alcohol unit pricing in Scotland may be an opportunity to increase trade. It’s not a health issue, we are not trying to destroy people’s health.

“We are dealing with this as a purely commercial matter. It could mean an increase in business: Northumberland has massively high unemployment, we have a ward here where 60 per cent of children are in poverty. It’s people’s own choice whether they drink or not.”

The BBC last week reported the Labour group’s economic spokeswoman Susan Davey as saying money should be set aside to promote the county as a destination for “booze cruises”.

“Tourism into England has an opportunity to grow second to none. By not setting aside an adequate advertising budget to promote travel and shopping in Northumberland to the Scots, the county may miss out on this golden opportunity.

“Shops in Berwick, Alnwick and Morpeth with easy access to the A1 should be preparing to accept a huge increase in trade but I expect, without an advertising campaign, Carlisle with its easy motorway access will win this race.”

Northumberland County Council itself issued at statement last week saying: “Northumberland County Council is not looking to promote the sale of cheap alcohol or attract people from Scotland to do this.”

And it is organising its own public meeting to debate minimum pricing of alcohol and has invited public health experts, doctors and the police to attend.

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