David Sullivan statement in full after stepping down from West Ham role amid impending publication of allegations
David Sullivan has announced his resignation with immediate effect and has vowed to fight against ‘false’ allegations Source link
David Sullivan has announced his resignation with immediate effect and has vowed to fight against ‘false’ allegations Source link
The soldier who died after falling from a horse at the Royal Windsor Show has been named as Lance Bombardier Ciara Sullivan. The 24-year-old died on Friday after she sustained serious injuries from falling from a horse as it left the arena. LBdr Sullivan, who joined the King‘s Troop, Royal Horse Artillery in June 2021, has been remembered by her commanding officer as a “fearless and gifted horsewoman”. “Lance Bombardier Ciara Sullivan, ‘Sully’ to her friends, was to all who had the privilege of serving alongside her, a bright light in any room she entered,” they said. “An immensely professional soldier and an exceptional jockey, she approached every day within the Troop with an infectious energy – the kind that lifted those around her without effort or intention – and was unfailingly present for her comrades in both the small moments and the hard ones.” LBdr Sullivan joined the army in November 2020, and had ridden horses since childhood, including competing in show jumping. Image: Lance Bombardier Ciara Sullivan. Pic: Ministry of Defence After joining …
A second man has been charged in connection with the murder of a student in Primrose Hill, the Metropolitan Police has said. Student filmmaker Finbar Sullivan, 21, died at the popular north London viewpoint on 7 April. Khalid Abdulqadir, 18, of Fellows Road, Camden, was charged with grievous bodily harm with intent, violent disorder and possession of a knife on Tuesday. Abdulqadir is due to appear at Wimbledon Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday. Oliuwadamilola Ogunyankinnu, 27, of Southbury Road, Enfield, had already been charged with murder in connection to the incident. He appeared at Stratford Magistrates’ Court on Monday. A 25-year-man, who was arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender, was released with no further action. This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version. You can receive breaking news alerts on a smartphone or tablet via the Sky News app. You can also follow us on WhatsApp and subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the latest news. Source link
A man stabbed to death on London’s Primrose Hill has been named by police as Finbar Sullivan. Officers said the 21-year-old died at the popular viewpoint on Tuesday evening after reports of a fight. Another man, believed to be in his 20s, was found with stab wounds in nearby Regent’s Park Road, but his injuries are described as not life changing. The Metropolitan Police said Mr Sullivan’s family are being supported by specialist officers. No arrests have been made so far. Detective Inspector Andy Griffin, who is leading the investigation, said police were following several lines of inquiry. Image: Pic: PA Image: Police cordoned off the scene, as well as the area nearby. Pic: PA “This incident occurred in a busy, public park and there may be many witnesses who can help us piece together what happened,” said DI Griffin. He added: “We are aware of footage circulating on social media around the time of the incident, and urge anyone who has any information, including photos or videos, which could support the investigation to urgently …
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In the shadowed corridors where history meets horror, where romance tangles with the grotesque, The Red Winter by Cameron Sullivan emerges as a debut that refuses to play by conventional genre rules. This is not your typical historical fantasy—it’s a blood-soaked love letter to 18th-century France, wrapped in the skin of a monster hunt and delivered with the erudition of a classical scholar who’s spent far too much time contemplating mortality. Sullivan’s novel takes the real historical mystery of the Beast of Gévaudan—a creature that terrorized rural France in the 1760s—and transforms it into something far stranger and more ambitious: a meditation on war, love, immortality, and the hidden supernatural forces that shape human history. The Magician and His Demon At the heart of The Red Winter by Cameron Sullivan stands Sebastian Grave, our immortal narrator who pens this account from modern-day Florence while reminiscing about events from two centuries past. Sebastian is no simple hero—he’s a magician bound to Sarmodel, an ancient demon who demands human hearts as payment for his services. This relationship …
Billy Frank Jr. was fourteen when, in December 1945, he was fishing for salmon in the Nisqually River near Olympia, Washington, and state game wardens arrested him for the first time. Over the next twenty-five years he was arrested (and often jailed) more than four dozen times, despite his airtight defense: he fished under the terms of the Medicine Creek Treaty of 1854, one of ten treaties negotiated by Governor Isaac Stevens in which the US promised tribes in the Puget Sound area of the Pacific Northwest the right to fish where they’d always fished “in common with all citizens of the Territory.” In 1965 the intensity of the arrests changed. Frank was fishing the Nisqually with his brother-in-law when armed wardens in a high-speed motorboat rammed Frank’s cedar canoe. “They got all kinds of training and riot gear—shields, helmets, everything,” Frank told Charles Wilkinson back in the 1970s, when Wilkinson was a young attorney with the Native American Rights Fund. “These guys had a budget. This was a war.” In the mid-1960s Frank was …