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  • PEOPLE: Ausschreitungen und Unruhen in der Westbank
    DUK10004988_031
    PEOPLE: Ausschreitungen und Unruhen in der Westbank
    October 10, 2015 - West Bank, Palestinian Territories: Palestinian militants of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas' armed wing, attend the funeral of 22-year-old Jihad al-Obeid, who died in clashes with Israeli security forces near the border, in Deir al-Balah, in the center of the Gaza Strip, on October 10, 2015. Violence between Israelis and Palestinians threatened to spiral out of control after unrest spread to Gaza, the Palestinian death toll rose and a new stabbing by a 16-year-old in Jerusalem. ( Ashraf Amra / Apaimages / Polaris ) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05283250
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477242_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477241_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477240_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477237_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477236_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477235_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477234_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477233_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477232_NUR
    Oktoberfest Reopens After Bomb Threat
    Police and security forces monitor entrances as visitors return to Oktoberfest after the festival grounds reopen at 5:30 p.m. following a bomb threat in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Tight security checks and restricted access are in place as crowds re-enter the event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477219_NUR
    Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    Police officers and fire brigade vehicles stand by with explosives detection dog units as security operations continue following a bomb threat at the Oktoberfest grounds in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Special vehicles equipped for detection dogs are deployed near festival entrances. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477207_NUR
    Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    Police officers stand by with explosives detection dog units as security operations continue following a bomb threat at the Oktoberfest grounds in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Special vehicles equipped for detection dogs are deployed near festival entrances. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477206_NUR
    Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    Police officers and fire brigade vehicles stand by with explosives detection dog units as security operations continue following a bomb threat at the Oktoberfest grounds in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Special vehicles equipped for detection dogs are deployed near festival entrances. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    DUKAS_189477193_NUR
    Explosives Detection Dog Unit At Oktoberfest After Bomb Threat
    Police officers stand by with explosives detection dog units as security operations continue following a bomb threat at the Oktoberfest grounds in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 1, 2025. Special vehicles equipped for detection dogs are deployed near festival entrances. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Economy And Business
    DUKAS_188979081_NUR
    Economy And Business
    Amazon Locker in Menton, France on May 26th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Economy And Business
    DUKAS_188979079_NUR
    Economy And Business
    Amazon locker in Menton, France on May 27th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Economy And Business
    DUKAS_188979072_NUR
    Economy And Business
    Amazon locker in Menton, France on May 27th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto)

     

  • Bitcoin
    DUKAS_188650959_NUR
    Bitcoin
    A physical representation of Bitcoin, with the Bitcoin logo displayed on a laptop computer screen in the background, is shown in this photo illustration taken in Athens, Greece, on September 9, 2025. (Photo by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)

     

  • Bitcoin
    DUKAS_188650957_NUR
    Bitcoin
    A physical representation of Bitcoin, with the Bitcoin logo displayed on a laptop computer screen in the background, is shown in this photo illustration taken in Athens, Greece, on September 9, 2025. (Photo by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)

     

  • IT Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_188444878_NUR
    IT Photo Illustrations
    Representation of Bitcoin cryptocurrency seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on September 4, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • IT Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_188444751_NUR
    IT Photo Illustrations
    Representation of Bitcoin cryptocurrency seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on September 4, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Person Jumps Into Water Near George Washington Bridge In New York City
    DUKAS_188335040_NUR
    Person Jumps Into Water Near George Washington Bridge In New York City
    NYPD aviation is at the scene. Emergency crews respond following a report of someone who jumps over the highway near the George Washington Bridge in Manhattan, New York, United States, on September 1, 2025. An individual abandons their vehicle on the highway on the New York side and jumps into the water below. NYPD and EMS stage at the scene as well as aviation. Police secure the vehicle that is abandoned at the scene. (Photo by Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto)

     

  • Person Jumps Into Water Near George Washington Bridge In New York City
    DUKAS_188335006_NUR
    Person Jumps Into Water Near George Washington Bridge In New York City
    Police secure the vehicle at the scene. Emergency crews respond following a report of someone who jumps over the highway near the George Washington Bridge in Manhattan, New York, United States, on September 1, 2025. An individual abandons their vehicle on the highway on the New York side and jumps into the water below. NYPD and EMS stage at the scene as well as aviation. Police secure the vehicle that is abandoned at the scene. (Photo by Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto)

     

  • Person Jumps Into Water Near George Washington Bridge In New York City
    DUKAS_188335003_NUR
    Person Jumps Into Water Near George Washington Bridge In New York City
    Police secure the vehicle at the scene. Emergency crews respond following a report of someone who jumps over the highway near the George Washington Bridge in Manhattan, New York, United States, on September 1, 2025. An individual abandons their vehicle on the highway on the New York side and jumps into the water below. NYPD and EMS stage at the scene as well as aviation. Police secure the vehicle that is abandoned at the scene. (Photo by Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto)

     

  • Protest Ended In Riots In Jakarta, Indonesia
    DUKAS_188055665_NUR
    Protest Ended In Riots In Jakarta, Indonesia
    Soldiers march to secure the protesters during the chaos in Jakarta, Indonesia, on August 25, 2025. The protesters, consisting of students and members of the public, oppose the policies of Indonesian parliamentarians, which they consider detrimental to the people. (Photo by Claudio Pramana/NurPhoto)

     

  • Protest Ended In Riots In Jakarta, Indonesia
    DUKAS_188055635_NUR
    Protest Ended In Riots In Jakarta, Indonesia
    Soldiers march to secure the protesters during the chaos in Jakarta, Indonesia, on August 25, 2025. The protesters, consisting of students and members of the public, oppose the policies of Indonesian parliamentarians, which they consider detrimental to the people. (Photo by Claudio Pramana/NurPhoto)

     

  • Ukraine Supporters Outside Of White House
    DUKAS_187896912_NUR
    Ukraine Supporters Outside Of White House
    A Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police Department officer uses police tape to secure a perimeter around a group of supporters of Ukraine gathered outside of the White House on August 18, 2025 as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visits with U.S. President Donald Trump and other European leaders. (Photo by Bryan Dozier/NurPhoto)

     

  • Elderly Couple At Lake
    DUKAS_187830671_NUR
    Elderly Couple At Lake
    An elderly couple steps into the water at Lake Plansee in Reutte, Tyrol, Austria, on August 15, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    DUKAS_176683319_EYE
    Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.

    Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.

    Greater Manchester Police carrying out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
    Police officers at HMP Manchester - known more widely as Strangeways prison - as part of Operation AVRO.
    The chief inspector of prisons’ report recently branded Strangeways as squalid and the most violent in the country with with organised crime gangs and widespread supply of drugs into the Victorian jail.
    Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    DUKAS_176683318_EYE
    Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.

    Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.

    Greater Manchester Police carrying out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
    Police officers at HMP Manchester - known more widely as Strangeways prison - as part of Operation AVRO.
    The chief inspector of prisons’ report recently branded Strangeways as squalid and the most violent in the country with with organised crime gangs and widespread supply of drugs into the Victorian jail.
    Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    DUKAS_176683315_EYE
    Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.

    Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.

    HMP Manchester governor Rob Knight (red tie) and Greater Manchester Police assistant chief constable John Webster ( cap, right) outside the jail as GMP carry out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
    Police officers at HMP Manchester - known more widely as Strangeways prison - as part of Operation AVRO.
    The chief inspector of prisons’ report recently branded Strangeways as squalid and the most violent in the country with with organised crime gangs and widespread supply of drugs into the Victorian jail.
    Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    DUKAS_176683317_EYE
    Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.

    Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.

    Greater Manchester Police carrying out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
    Police officers at HMP Forest Bank in Salford and ANPR vehicles tracking the movements of visitors at and near the prison.
    Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Sellafield nuclear site hacked by groups linked to Russia and China
    DUKAS_163570433_EYE
    Sellafield nuclear site hacked by groups linked to Russia and China
    Malware may still be present and potential effects have been covered up by staff, investigation reveals.

    Some of Sellafield's most sensitive activities such as moving radioactive waste, monitoring for leaks and checking for fires may have been compromised.

    The UK's most hazardous nuclear site, Sellafield, has been hacked into by cyber groups closely linked to Russia and China.

    The astonishing disclosure and its potential effects have been consistently covered up by senior staff at the vast nuclear waste and decommissioning site, the investigation has found.

    Sellafield, formerly known as Windscale, a multi-function nuclear site (primarily nuclear waste processing, storage and nuclear decommissioning). Nuclear power generation took place at Sellafield between 1956 and 2003. Seascale, Cumbria.
    30/11/23

    © David Levene / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Sellafield nuclear site hacked by groups linked to Russia and China
    DUKAS_163570449_EYE
    Sellafield nuclear site hacked by groups linked to Russia and China
    Malware may still be present and potential effects have been covered up by staff, investigation reveals.

    Some of Sellafield's most sensitive activities such as moving radioactive waste, monitoring for leaks and checking for fires may have been compromised.

    The UK's most hazardous nuclear site, Sellafield, has been hacked into by cyber groups closely linked to Russia and China.

    The astonishing disclosure and its potential effects have been consistently covered up by senior staff at the vast nuclear waste and decommissioning site, the investigation has found.

    Sellafield nuclear site with the town of Seascale in the foreground. Sellafield, formerly known as Windscale, is a multi-function nuclear site (primarily nuclear waste processing, storage and nuclear decommissioning). Nuclear power generation took place at Sellafield between 1956 and 2003. Seascale, Cumbria.
    30/11/23

    © David Levene / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224443_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224439_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224440_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224442_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224441_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224438_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224444_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297540_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297539_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297625_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297618_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297542_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297541_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297626_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297623_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297624_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

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