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Handgun-wielding robber left Stirling woman terrified in flat invasion

Handgun-wielding robber left Stirling woman terrified in flat invasion

The Courier27-05-2025

A robber armed with a handgun terrorised a woman in a bid to get money from a Stirling flat where he believed a sex worker lived, a court heard.
David Hunter, 39, forced his way into the property after brandishing the weapon when the victim answered the door.
Advocate depute Martin Crawford told the High Court in Edinburgh: 'The accused believed the property to house a sex worker.
'He grabbed the woman by the neck with one hand and pushed the gun into her side with the other.'
The prosecutor said: 'She did not know the accused. She was terrified by the accused's actions.'
The intruder began repeatedly making demands for money and took her to the kitchen at gunpoint, where she tried to look for money.
She attempted to call the police but Hunter took her phone.
He began rifling through a bedroom to find cash and she again made a bid to escape but Hunter grabbed her and dragged her back into the flat.
A delivery driver heard a scream and saw the victim in the doorway in a state of distress.
Hunter let go of the woman, who did not speak English but was able to gesture to witnesses she had been choked and to call the police.
Hunter climbed out of a back window and walked towards a man, pointing the gun at him.
He then returned to the common close where the flat was and brandished the weapon at other witnesses before leaving.
Hunter, of Lambert Terrace, Alloa, was tracked down through descriptions of his appearance and CCTV footage.
The advocate depute said: 'He was interviewed by police, during which he repeatedly said he had no memory of the events of the afternoon.'
The recycling centre worker admitted assaulting the woman and robbing her of a mobile phone on September 5 last year, when he appeared at court via a video link to prison.
He pointed the handgun at her, seized her neck, demanded money, grabbed her phone from her, seized her by the head and body and struggled with her.
The court heard Hunter was previously jailed for sexual assault and for dangerous driving.
Defence solicitor advocate Gordon Martin said the handgun used by Hunter was an airsoft BB pistol.
Judge Lord Scott told Hunter: 'You have pleaded guilty to an extremely serious charge.'
He adjourned sentencing for the preparation of a background report and risk assessment.
He told Hunter he will continue to be remanded until a sentencing hearing on July 15 at the High Court in Glasgow.

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He left the country after a £50m money-laundering case. Now he has new life in sun
He left the country after a £50m money-laundering case. Now he has new life in sun

Wales Online

time3 hours ago

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He left the country after a £50m money-laundering case. Now he has new life in sun

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Bookkeeper's killer might never share darkest secret after umbrella clue emerges
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Daily Mirror

time4 hours ago

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Bookkeeper's killer might never share darkest secret after umbrella clue emerges

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Murder Most Puzzling review: You'll be left puzzled by Channel 5's new crime drama, where Prue Leith meets Taggart
Murder Most Puzzling review: You'll be left puzzled by Channel 5's new crime drama, where Prue Leith meets Taggart

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Murder Most Puzzling review: You'll be left puzzled by Channel 5's new crime drama, where Prue Leith meets Taggart

Channel 5's new crime drama Murder Most Puzzling (Channel 5, Thurs, 8pm) is, in itself, a bit of a puzzle. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... At first glance, it bears all the hallmarks of the 'cosy crime' boom – an English country town with the comfortingly bucolic name of Bakerbury, an amateur sleuth in late middle age, sundry bosy-bodies and bumpkins. But after a sickly-sweet, pastel-hued opening scene, it takes a sudden u-turn to a rain-sodden graveyard, where the shoeless body of a young woman has been found, murdered. And the jarring notes don't stop there. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Cora Felton (Phyllis Logan) is 'The Puzzle Lady' in the new Channel 5 crime drama Murder Most Puzzling (Picture: Channel 5) Our sharp-witted crime-buster, Cora Felton (Phyllis Logan), is known as 'The Puzzle Lady', on account of her being a famous crossword-compiler with a nice – and apparently, lucrative - sideline in baked goods. But when we first encounter her, she is slumped asleep in her car after a drunken night out – thinking nothing of drink-driving through the lanes surrounding Bakerbury to her country home. And rather than being a quiet-as-a-mouse Marple type, content to fade into the background to observe the dark doings of those around her, ex-pat Scot Cora bustles around making herself persona non grata at the local police station, invading the privacy of grieving parents and poking around the crime scenes. Throw in a liberal sprinkling of effing and jeffing, Cora's habit of sparking up a gasper whenever she feels a bit stressed, and a liking for chunky necklaces and bright knitwear and The Puzzle Lady comes on as a cross between Prue Leith and Taggart. Alistair Brammer plays local newspaper reporter Anton Grant in the new Channel 5 crime drama Murder Most Puzzling (Picture: Channel 5) And yes, there's definitely 'bin a murrrrdah'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Three, in fact, all done in with hammer blows, as well as a fatal car crash in the past – which inspires a less-than-cosy, decidedly off-colour visual gag – and talk of sexual role-play gone wrong. Bakerbury, meanwhile, is hardly the Cotswold-stone idyll of Midsomer, or the medieval chapels of Cambridge. It seems more like a down-at-heel market town, with a pee-stained multi-storey car park and a sink estate on the edge of town populated by track-suited yobbos. Cora (Phyllis Logan) consults with niece Sherry (Charlotte Hope) in the new Channel 5 crime drama Murder Most Puzzling (Picture: Channel 5) This uneasy mix of the cosy and the corrupt continues into the supporting cast, with Cora's niece Sherry (Charlotte Hope) hiding a dark secret involving her ne-er-do-well husband, while Cora herself is not really the puzzle lady she's cracked up to be. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The main thing about this murder-mystery, however, is that it finds it hard to sustain interest over its two -hour running time, stretching out the 'crossword clue on the body' mystery before discounting it, the various suspects being questioned and released, questioned and released, and everyone we run into seemingly fancying themselves as a detective. Except, of course, the actual detectives themselves, who are totally dependent on everyone else doing the police work while being shouted at by the dim local mayor in one scene every 15 minutes, regular as clockwork. Phyllis Logan does seem to enjoy playing Cora, though, and at least she is not the stereotypical grey-haired sleuth in pearls and twin-set. She loves knocking back the mid-morning bloody Marys, and you believe her when she lets slip the odd F-word, as if you can take Cora out of the Gorbals, but you can't take the Gorbals out of Cora. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Hair of the dog,' she tells her niece. 'besides, I'm going to need a boost if I'm going to solve this murder.' Condensed to a tight one-hour, Murder Most Puzzling would holds its own, but over two hours you can't ignore the inconsistencies in plot and tone which leaving you feeling slightly down and a bit cross.

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