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Daniel Radcliffe's magical Christmas: Harry Potter actor increases his fortune by more than £6million in 2013

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Actor Daniel Radcliffe made a £6million profit in 2013Harry Potter star, 24, is now worth more than £54millionHe has starred in three films this year, Reported by CapitalBay 21 hours ago.

Harry Potter actor, Daniel Radcliffe, increases fortune by over £6million in 2013

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Harry Potter actor, Daniel Radcliffe, increases fortune by over £6million in 2013 Gilmore Jacobs, the firm that manages the 24-year-old Harry Potter actor's assets, is now worth more than £54million. Reported by MailOnline 13 hours ago.

Ashes 2013-14: Australia v England – live! | Geoff Lemon, Richard Cooke and Daniel Harris

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*Over-by-over report:* Will England salvage some pride or will Australia be ruthless in the pursuit of a whitewash? Follow day one of the fourth Test with Geoff Lemon

Geoff Lemon
Richard Cooke
Daniel Harris Reported by guardian.co.uk 17 hours ago.

Lifeline to small firms under bank lending shake-up: Easier to borrow for businesses as new rules are revealed

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Treasury to propose Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds and RBS share ratingsThis will make it easier for small banks to provide firms with cashBy Daniel Martin PUBLISHED: Reported by CapitalBay 11 hours ago.

South Sudan unrest: Australia pledges military aircraft to boost UN force

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Warren Truss repeats calls for Australians to leave the country following violent clashes

Daniel Hurst Reported by guardian.co.uk 14 hours ago.

17 migrants die in capsizing off Turks and Caicos

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At least 17 migrants from Haiti died Wednesday when their overloaded sailboat capsized as it was being towed to shore in the Turks and Caicos Islands, officials in the British territory said.

A marine unit of the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force had intercepted the packed sloop about two hours earlier and was escorting it to shore when it abruptly overturned, sparking a frantic search and rescue operation in the pre-dawn darkness.

Karlo Pelissier, the Haitian consul to the Turks and Caicos, said he was told by survivors that several migrants attempted to jump off the 28-foot boat and flee to land as they neared the island of Providenciales and that the surge caused the overloaded sloop to overturn. Officials had not confirmed that as the cause of the capsizing.

Authorities rescued 33 migrants, including one 12-year-old boy, and recovered the bodies of 17 people. Divers and U.S. Coast Guard helicopters assisted in a search for additional survivors or victims in the area where the incident occurred, about 150 yards (meters) from shore. Earlier, officials had said there were 18 confirmed deaths but the toll was revised downward.

A scaled-down search was planned for Thursday but further casualties were not expected, said Neil Smith, a government spokesman. The remains of the 12 men and five women killed would be repatriated after autopsies to establish the cause of death.

Survivors were being detained at a migrant detention center in Providenciales, the most populated island in the chain southeast of the Bahamas, and there were no major injuries. "They are tired, but they are OK," Pelissier said in a phone interview as he met with them.

The migrants, mostly from the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince and the northern city of Cap-Haitien, had set off on their voyage Sunday night, Pelissier said. They paid $500-$1,000 each and were trying to reach Miami or the Bahamas as well as Turks and Caicos, which has an established community of migrants from Haiti working in construction, tourism and service jobs.

Haitian officials say they try to discourage migrants from risking these journeys.

"We are saddened by such tragedy and present our condolences and prayers to the families and friends of those affected by this accident," said Salim Succar, an adviser to Haitian Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe.

The rescued migrants are expected to be repatriated to Haiti in the coming days.

Authorities had not yet identified the captain of the vessel or any of the human smugglers from among the survivors, police spokesman Audley Astwood said. "Right now, the focus of our operation is search and rescue, trying to save as many lives as possible," he added.

The Turks and Caicos, in addition to being a destination for Haitian migrants seeking to escape their impoverished country, is also a favored route of smugglers. The waters surrounding the islands are dotted with many tiny cays, reefs and patches of shallow water, making it treacherous for sailors, especially when boats are overloaded.

The capsizing of migrant vessels has become common throughout the region. In November, an overloaded migrant sloop overturned in the southern Bahamas and an estimated 30 people drowned.

In July 2009, a sailboat with estimated 200 Haitians aboard ran aground on a reef off Turks and Caicos, killing at least 15 people. In May 2007, at least 61 migrants died when their boat capsized, also just off shore from Providenciales.

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Associated Press writers Vivian Tyson in the Turks and Caicos Islands and Trenton Daniel in Port-au-Prince contributed to this report. Reported by Click Orlando 14 hours ago.

British man jailed in Malta petitions Europe

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Daniel Holmes, convicted in 2011 for cannabis offences, is alleging 'systemic discrimination' against non-Maltese offenders

The family of a British man serving 10 years in prison in Malta for cannabis offences is petitioning the European commission alleging "systemic discrimination" against non-Maltese offenders.

Daniel Holmes, from south Wales, was convicted in 2011 five years after his arrest and the sentence was confirmed by appeal court judges in October. The case has fuelled a debate over the country's drug laws, with the opera tenor Joseph Calleja joining protests at what he calls a disproportionate punishment.

Critics argue that more serious drug offenders and other criminals guilty of rape, grievous bodily harm and fraud have received shorter sentences than Holmes, 35. He had hoped to split charges and pleaded guilty to possession and cultivation of cannabis for personal use but was unable to do so and was penalised for importation and trafficking as well.

Supporters say he admitted offences on legal advice expecting to receive less punishment. His lawyer had suggested a four-year jail term and the prosecutors had wanted eight.

Appeal judges, upholding the sentences including a €23,000 (£19,270) fine, said Maltese law made no distinction "between one dangerous drug and another". Holmes had admitted serious offences, some carrying life sentences, and had more than a kilo of cannabis, they said.

Since the appeal court judgment, there has been more anger after a Maltese man, already serving 11 years for trafficking drugs, was sentenced to three and a half years in prison and fined €3,000 for growing almost twice as much cannabis as Holmes.

Holmes told the Guardian he was buoyed by the Maltese people who had campaigned on his behalf, including on protest marches. "Although I am a foreigner, it is not just [about] my case. It is the whole system and the way it works." Everything "moves so incredibly slowly", added Holmes.

"Although I have been pretty much always a cannabis smoker, I have held down jobs and never let it get in the way of my life."

Holmes went to Malta in 2005 in the hope of combining work as a chef and his passion for scuba diving but was unable to find work. He and another Briton with whom he shared a rented flat, Barry Lee, were arrested in June 2006. Holmes was freed on bail after 11 days but was arrested the following year for being in a stolen car, though later acquitted and released.

Lee was found dead in a prison cell in Malta in 2010. A coroner in Bolton, UK, later recorded an open verdict because he was not convinced Lee intended to kill himself, according to local newspaper reports.

Holmes spent about a year in prison in all before finding work at a pub, where he met his now wife Marzena, who is Polish, in 2009, well before his trial. They have a two-year-old daughter Rainbow.

"It is incredibly hard," he said. "I have missed enjoying (Rainbow's) first tooth," said Holmes. "She is growing so fast but she was so shy. She asked this time 'Why is Daddy not coming with us?'"

Facing another Christmas in jail, Holmes said: "It is not a nice place to be. There are a few of us who try to look on the bright side, play Ludo, have a bit of Christmas cake but it is a very bleak time of year." The British embassy and Foreign Office had been "terrible and maddening" in their lack of support, Holmes said. Apart from channelling money from and to his family, "they have given me no help. It has caused my mum and dad much more stress."

Holmes's father Mel, said: "Daniel has now done three years altogether for the crime and that should be long enough." The family was considering further legal action in Malta and, depending on the result, taking the case to the European court of human rights. Mel has also written to the European commission, alleging the justice system was "based on systematic discrimination against anyone who is not Maltese".

He and his wife Kate, both retired teachers, have so far spent about £30,000 in financial support for their son including rent, legal fees and travelling to see him.

Opera singer Calleja, Malta's cultural ambassador, said via his Facebook page hoped before Holmes's appeal he hoped "good sense and true justice" would prevail.

He told the Guardian: "It is in the hands of our politicians to review the laws so that the relevant judges, magistrates whatever, are able to implement them correctly."

No one argued Holmes should not have been punished, said Calleja. "What people argue is: 'Is the punishment disproportionate?' I think that it is. More serious drug offenders have received less punishment."

What Holmes had done was "stupid" and "illegal" but his own internet research suggested marijuana was less dangerous than cigarettes and alcohol.

Owen Bonnici, Malta's parliamentary secretary for justice, said: "The government takes the enforcement of drug laws very seriously." Drug trafficking was "a heinous crime" because it led to the destruction of innocent victims.

But when it came to drug possession, said Bonnici, "the government is aware that most of the time the offenders are themselves victims of drug abuse.

"This means that a discussion should immediately be undertaken in our country so that people who are accused with the crime of drug possession are effectively helped … to come out of drug abuse. In most of the cases the sending of victims of drug abuse to jail would effectively make their drug abuse problem even worse." Such reforms should be in place by the end of next year.

The Foreign Office said: "We are aware of the detention in Malta of Daniel Holmes, and his recent appeal. We continue to provide consular assistance to Mr Holmes and his family." Reported by guardian.co.uk 9 hours ago.

Who's been in the courts?

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Who's been in the courts? This is Derbyshire --

JAMIE Konzak, 29, of Bembridge Drive, Alvaston, was given an 84-day jail sentence suspended for 12 months, a supervision order, told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for dishonestly receiving stolen goods worth £55 in Derby on October 19.

JANE Lamont, 55, of Cowley Close, Ilkeston, was fined £270, told to pay a £27 victim surcharge, £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Ilkeston on June 6.

NICOLA Peeling, 28, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 56-day jail sentence suspended for 12 months, an alcohol treatment order, told to pay a £100 victim and £85 costs for stealing beer from Tesco, in Derby, while subject to a previous community order in Derby on October 22.

KYLE Bull, 26, of Castle Croft, Alvaston, was fined £40 with a £20 victim surcharge and given three penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit in Shardlow Road, Alvaston, on June 18.

LEE Cooper, 34, of Carrington Street, Derby, was fined £30 with a £20 victim surcharge for driving without wearing a seatbelt in Derby on May 11.

STEPHEN Morgan, 44, of Burton 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 the correct licence or insurance, and above the 50mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on April 20.

SAVAS Paskouis, 45, of Underhill Avenue, Derby, was given a 16-week jail term suspended for two years, and must pay £360 costs for dishonestly giving a false document to the Department for Work and Pensions on January 31 and March 8 in Derby.

ADAM Anthony, 31, of Ringwood Close, Chaddesden, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 18 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay £80 surcharge and £85 costs for breaching a non-molestation order in Derby on November 20.

LEVI Morley, 36, of Nairn Avenue, Derby, was given a three-month jail sentence, suspended for 12 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing five packs of Persil Small and Mighty from the Co-operative in Derby on September 29.

STEFAN Bera, 59, of Sherbourne Drive, Hilton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge, £175 costs and given four penalty points for driving without due care and attention in Derby on January 11.

RYAN Curley, 19, of Boulton Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £100 compensation, a £15 victim surcharge and £200 costs for assault in Derby on July 31.

STEVEN Evans, 46, of Nottingham Road, Ilkeston, was given a 12-week jail sentence for stealing bread from B&M Bargains, in Ilkeston, on November 18, while subject to a previous community order.

DALE Tew, 21, of Kerry Street, Derby, was fined £100 with a £20 victim surcharge for going on to the playing area during a Derby County football match at Pride Park, on October 5.

MARTIN Pollard, 34, of Clarence Road, Long Eaton, was jailed for 16 weeks for stealing toiletries from the Co-op on October 29, and wine from Sainsbury's on October 26, both in Long Eaton.

ROBERT Slonecki, 56, of Station Road, Ilkeston, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement and told to pay a £60 victim surcharge for possessing amphetamine in Ilkeston on June 14 and August 1.

RAZA Mehmood, 37, of Victoria Crescent, Burton, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for driving without insurance in Derby on June 20.

MICHAEL Porter, 36, of London Road, Derby, was jailed for four weeks for damaging a female police cell in Derby on November 7.

SCOTT Tooze, 26, of Nightingale Road, Derby, was given a community order, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and given six penalty points on licence for driving a moped whilst disqualified and without insurance in Derby on November 7.

GARY Welton, 45, of Staveley Close, Shelton Lock, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on November 6.

DARIUSZ Luczyk, 36, of Bethulie Road, Derby, was fined £216, told to pay £35 costs and disqualified from driving for six months for speeding on Osmaston Park Road, in Derby, for driving without the correct licence or insurance, all on May 25.

TONIA Sutcliffe, 45, of Kingfisher Walk, Sinfin, was given a community order with supervision requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing items worth £124.05 from Sainsbury's at Kingsway, Derby, on October 15.

JHI Proctor, 24, of Becksitch Lane, Belper, was given an eight week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, a supervision order, told to pay £49.99 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £35 costs for stealing a child's ride-on tractor from B&M Bargains, in Belper, on October 23.

NATHAN Leeson, 21, of Stockbrook Road, Derby, had a supervision order extended for two months for breaching a previous community order made by Southern Derbyshire magistrates on June 25.

PAUL Stevens, 19, of Holly Street, Alvaston, was fined £145 with a £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for assault in Derby on July 7.

ROBERT Zablovsky, 19, of no fixed abode, was told to pay £50 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on November 3.

All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates

ALAN Cook, 27, of Harrington Street, Pear Tree, was given a four-month jail term suspended for a year, a supervision order, told to pay £50.21 and £80 surcharge for stealing from the Co-op in Derby on October 24 and making off without paying for petrol, also in Derby on September 4. He was also told to pay £5 compensation for taking a ready meal from Sainsburys, in the city, on June 29.

DARIS Baulkalns, 41, of Canterbury Street, Chaddesden, was fined £75 with £20 surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given four penalty points for failing to give vehicle and driver information to police and driving above the 30mph speed limit on Hampshire Road, in Derby, on March 30.

DANIEL Smith, 27, of Coton Park, Linton, was jailed for 18 weeks for breaching a previous suspended prison sentence, given on November 9 for drink-driving, taking a vehicle without consent and driving while disqualified in Swadlincote on August 21.

FABIAN Thomas, 22, of Dorset Street, Derby, was given a 12 month conditional discharge, told to pay £15 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for possessing Class B drug methylmethcathinone in Derby on August 31.

QABEER Yusef, 26, of Cummings Street, Derby, was fined £110 with a £20 surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given nine penalty points for careless driving in Spondon on May 4.

THOMAS Pruvis, 19, of Fenwick Street, Derby, was fined £115 with a £35 surcharge, told to pay £35 and given three penalty points for driving without a correct licence or insurance in Allenton on June 4.

AARON Millward, 24, of Ashover Close, Chaddesden, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing fragrance sets from Boots, Derby, on November 11, while subject to a previous conditional discharge.

LAURA Harvey, 31, of Grammer Street, Denby Village, was fined £75 with £20 surcharge and £35 costs and given six points for driving above the 70mph limit on the A38 near Ripley, on May 7.

All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates

PATRICK Roome, 45, of Hoggett Close, Beeston, was fined £35 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving on the M1 without wearing a seatbelt, near Long Eaton, on May 9.

TOMASZ Wojcik, 42, of Leacroft Road, Derby, was fined £80 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving above the 40mph speed limit on Osmaston Park Road, in Derby, on May 4.

JACQUELINE Anderson, 50, of Falcon Way, Sinfin, was fined £40 with a £20 victim surcharge, and given three penalty points on licence, for driving while using a hand-held mobile phone in Derby on May 7.

ARKADIJS Stephans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for driving without insurance or the correct licence in Derby on June 14.

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

LEIGHTON Murray, 28, of Boswell Square, Derby, was fined £100 with a £20 victim surcharge for damaging a toilet door and window in South Derbyshire Magistrates' Court on July 1.

STEPHEN Barradell, 47, of Addison Road, Derby, was fined £110 with a £20 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and banned from driving for 20 months for drink-driving in Derby on November 3.

MADELINE Craven, 22, of Willow Meadow Road, Ashbourne, was fined £36, given a community order, told to pay a £60 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for drunk and disorderly behaviour, and assaulting police in Ashbourne on November 3.

PAWEL Kozak, 39, of Lime Tree Rise, Ilkeston, was fined £160 with a £20 surcharge with £85 costs and banned for 14 months for drink-driving in Ilkeston on November 2.

All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates

CHRISTOPHER Scott, 35, of Chestnut Avenue, Midway, was given a two-year conditional discharge, told to pay £100 compensation, £15 surcharge and £100 costs for assault in Swadlincote on June 25.

SAMUEL Chambers, 20, of Dale View Gardens, Kilburn, was fined £184 with £20 surcharge and £85 costs and banned for 20 months for drink-driving in Ripley on November 3.

SAMANATHA Jones , 38, of Ozier Holt, Long Eaton, was given an eight-week jail term suspended for a year, a supervision order and told to pay £100 compensation for assault and racially aggravated assault in Long Eaton on June 3.

ALISTAIR Dalziel, 35, of Pippin Gardens, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points for breaching a traffic order on Acorn Way, Derby, on June 25.

MOHEEN Hussain, 18, Wilfred Street, of Derby, was fined £250 with a £25 surcharge, told to pay £300 compensation and £100 costs, and given nine points for careless driving and for having no insurance, in Derby on February 18.

SHANE Rostron, 19, of Werburgh Street, Derby, was fined £250 with a £20 surcharge and £85 costs for being drunk and disorderly in Derby on October 26 and failing to surrender to custody on November 12.

KAMALJIT Jassal, 37, of Foston Hall Prison, was jailed for an additional 10 weeks for assault in the prison on October 14.

NICOLI Lacatus, 33, of Ash Street, Ilkeston, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and £85 costs and banned for 17 months for drink-driving and having no insurance, in Ilkeston on October 28. Also fined £50 for failing to surrender to custody on November 14.

ANTON Fenton, 18, of Rosehill Street, Derby, was fined £75 with a £20 surcharge and £85 costs for possessing cannabis on November 15.

All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates

Abdul Ghani, 46, of Almond Street, Derby, was fined £180, told to pay £35 costs and given three points for carrying eight people in a vehicle in a way that could have been dangerous to them, in Derby on May 28. He was also fined an additional £90 for not wearing a seatbelt.

JAMES Hall, 36, of Rupert Road, Chaddesden, was fined £400, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for failing to give police information about the driver of a vehicle believed to have committed an offence in Ripley on July 28.

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 or the correct licence in Derby on August 6.

PAUL Barnett, 33, of Commerce Street, Derby, was fined £260, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points for driving above the 30mph speed limit on A511 Raynesway, in Derby, on July 14.

All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates

DAVID Lees, 37, of Wood Street, Church Gresley, was fined £105 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving whilst using a hand-held mobile phone and not wearing a seatbelt in Repton on June 19.

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 in Derby on July 17.

JASON Bowman, 25, of Dean Street, Derby, was told to pay £300 compensation and given eight penalty points for failing to stop after causing damage to another vehicle or report the incident and driving without insurance in Derby on June 11.

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

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.

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

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 lic Reported by This is 9 hours ago.

Chiefs’ Daniel, Other Backups Ready For Chance

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Chiefs’ Daniel, Other Backups Ready For Chance KANSAS CITY, Mo.— The Chiefs are paying Chase Daniel more than $4 million in salary and bonuses this season, yet the backup quarterback has not taking a meaningful snap in a game.

There’s an argument to be made that fact …

The post Chiefs’ Daniel, Other Backups Ready For Chance appeared first on The Epoch Times. Reported by Epoch Times 20 hours ago.

Woman arrested after famous Austin mural defaced

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A woman has been arrested after police saw her defacing a well-known Austin mural painted by Texas singer-songwriter Daniel Johnston. According to an arrest affidavit, 32-year-old Rebecca Guest was arrested Christmas Eve and charged with a Class A misdemeanor for the act of graffiti. Reported by NY Daily News 14 hours ago.

Kansas State Notebook

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Daniel Sams was the secondary option in Kansas State's two-quarterback system as a sophomore this season. Reported by KansasCity.com 14 hours ago.

Clip From 'Revenge' January Return: Emily and Daniel's Reunion After the Fatal Shooting

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Clip From 'Revenge' January Return: Emily and Daniel's Reunion After the Fatal Shooting Check out what Emily asks to her new husband when he visits her in the hospital after getting shot twice on her wedding day. Reported by AceShowbiz 14 hours ago.

These Pictures Of Apple's First Employees Are Absolutely Wonderful (AAPL)

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These Pictures Of Apple's First Employees Are Absolutely Wonderful (AAPL) The year was 1977. Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak had barely moved out of the Jobs' family garage to the company's first official corporate address, 20863 Stevens Creek Blvd., (Building 3, Suite C) in Cupertino, Calif.

The pair had successfully begun shipping their first computer, a naked circuit board called Apple I. It had neither a keyboard nor a screen, and functioned more as part of a kit that computer hobbyists could build into something more useful, if they knew what they were doing.

Two early Apple employees, Bob Martinengo and Mark Johnson, spoke to Business Insider about what it was like working with the two Steves back in the days when nobody knew what Apple was. They passed on to us this collection of images from Apple's early days. We've combined it with some other early Apple images from Business Insider's archives.

The images are remarkable because they show life at Apple before the period when everyone realized the company was going to change the world. For them, it was just a paycheck. And, of course, carrying and using a camera in the 1970s took a lot more effort than it does today. They weren't used daily, the way phone cameras are now — so early Apple images are relatively rare.

This image (below) shows Chrisann Brennan, Robert Martinengo and Mark Johnson standing in front of what appears to be a pile of boxes containing the Apple II.

"It was obviously a heck of a lot of fun," Martinengo says. (He now works at AMAC Accessibility, a company that makes products and services for disabled students.)

Brennan, 22 at the time, later became Jobs' girlfriend, a relationship he trashed when she became pregnant. Jobs disavowed the child, Lisa, despite naming the Apple Lisa machine (in development in 1978) after her. Jobs only admitted Lisa was his daughter when she reached her teens.

Johnson, like Martinengo, was employed to assemble the Apple II.

This 1978 image shows more of the Apple II team, including Steve Jobs:

From left to right: Elmer Baum, Mike Markkula, Gary Martin, Andre Dubois, Steve Jobs, Sue Cabannis, Mike Scott, and Don Bruener. Standing in the rear is Mark Johnson.

Note that in this photo, Jobs appears to be arguing with Mike Scott, the first president of the company, who had been brought in to keep a leash on Jobs. This was a typical event, Johnson says.

Elmer Baum was an engineer. "He was a senior, responsible person they brought," Johnson says. "He worked in production and engineering. He was a little bit grumpy, 'you kids get off my lawn!' kind of guy."

Mike Markulla was the venture capitalist who provided Apple's first proper funding and installed real management. He used to drive a Corvette Stingray. (Johnson, who was a teenager at the time, said he did get a ride in it once.)

Andre Dubois is believed to have been Apple's first European sales manager. Sue Cabannis was the office manager. Gary Martin worked in accounting. Don Bruener was an engineer.

The Apple II was the machine that really put Apple on the map: An integrated home computer with a keyboard and screen, that anybody could use.

Here's another shot of the crew on the Apple II team, with the product in the background on a set of racks:

Left to right: Elmer Baum, Mark Johnson, Don Bruener, and Daniel Kottke. Kottke, another engineer, has since become something of an archivist of early Apple memorabilia.

This floor plan (below) of the Stevens Creek office, drawn by Johnson, shows just how small the company was at the time.

It was "A rather small office space," Johnson says. "This one office included the lobby and office space without a dividing wall. When you turn to the right, you enter the manufacturing area. Incidentally, Apple occupied the adjacent office space to the right of suite C. A smaller office space where Bill Fernandez designed circuit board layouts." Here's a copy of Apple's first-ever letterhead, as saved by Johnson:

Note that in the Stevens Creek office, Jobs and Wozniak worked right next to each other. That would change when Apple — now with about 30 employees — moved to its second, slightly larger office on Bandley Drive, also in Cupertino. There, Jobs and Woz sat as far apart as possible:

"In the short time I was there it went from a goofy startup to a full-blown production line," Johnson says. It went from being a place that was a lot of fun to being more of a "workaday" corporate experience, he remembers.

"My only insider credit was that my mom had this relationship with Steve, Steve liked my mom. This was before the summer I started working at Apple. He had an interview on TV in Oakland, and I got drafted to drive him in my VW bug. Steve, even at that point, he was a handful, an intense person."

When the Apple II launched in the summer of 1977, it had color graphics. So Jobs changed the company's logo to an Apple silhouette filled with a rainbow.

Johnson says, "Steve Jobs commissioned a local shop to create an embroidered patch to commemorate the new corporate logo.  These patches were handed to each of the employees by Steve. I have asked around via Facebook to the other early Apple employees and no one can remember them. If there is another patch that survived, I'd like to know.  This might be quite a unique artifact of early Apple days."

People's memories have faded over time, of course. If you think we got any details wrong please email jedwards@businessinsider.com

*SEE ALSO: The First 10 Apple Employees: Where Are They Now?*

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 14 hours ago.

New bullying measures criticised for fostering 'entitlement and victimhood'

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Chamber of commerce chief calls for people 'to be more tolerant of each other' in the workplace

Daniel Hurst Reported by guardian.co.uk 12 hours ago.

The Worst TV Shows of 2013 from The Fien Print

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The Worst TV Shows of 2013 from The Fien Print HitFix's Daniel Fienberg counts down his list of the Worst TV Shows of 2013, including Dads, Dracula, 2 Broke Girls, Community, The X Factor, How I Met Your Mother, Cult, Dexter, Under the Dome and more. Reported by HitFix 11 hours ago.

Daniel kicks cancer and now earns his tae kwon do black belt too

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This is Somerset --

A 14-year-old boy who was left paralysed after suffering from a brain tumour has baffled doctors by making an unexpected recovery and getting his black belt in tae kwon do.

Daniel Kimmins underwent emergency surgery just days before his seventh birthday when he was diagnosed with a brain tumour.

After the operation the youngster was left paralysed down the left hand side of his body – which doctors warned could be permanent.

But now Daniel has fought against the odds to make a full recovery and gain his black belt in tae kwon do. Daniel, from Bath, took up the martial art when he was six years old and within a year he had earned his yellow belt.

But the youngster was forced to give up his favourite hobby after a brain tumour left him fighting for his life.

Now Daniel has bounced back, despite doctors warning his parents that he wouldn't pull through, and is now proudly wearing a black belt to his tae kwon do lessons.

His mum, Heidi, 47, said: "After his operation Daniel couldn't move the left side of his body and he had lost the ability to speak – which is something the doctors warned may happen.

"We were never given any hope. We were always of the impression that he wouldn't recover from the tumour.

"No one thought he'd make it, he was so poorly not even the doctors thought he would pull through. But slowly but surely he got back to himself.

"Now he has learnt to walk and talk all over again and he is able to do all of the things he did before he had the tumour, which makes me unbelievably proud of him."

After his operation the youngster underwent 13 months of chemotherapy and radiotherapy, causing his weight to plummet.

Daniel was in a wheel chair for more that two years and he had to learn to crawl, walk and talk all over again.

The student returned to his hobby two years after his diagnosis and has since got his green, blue, red and now his black belt.

Daniel said: "I got my black belt a few weeks ago now, it was absolutely amazing. I went with three of my friends and one of their mums and they all got theirs too." Reported by This is 11 hours ago.

Sherwood aware of Levy gamble

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Tim Sherwood admits Daniel Levy has taken a gamble on him after he came away from his first match in charge of Tottenham with an underwhelming draw against West Brom. Reported by ESPNSTAR.com 12 hours ago.

BlackBerry analysts say Lazaridis was smart to sell shares

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BlackBerry analysts say Lazaridis was smart to sell shares Questionable decisions have plagued BlackBerry’s co-founders for years, but one decision that even the analysts have condoned is Mike Lazaridis’ recent sale of more than 3 million shares of the company’s stock. A quick glance at BlackBerry’s recent history might scare off even the most uninformed investors, so Lazaridis took advantage of the huge spike following the Foxconn news and interim CEO Jason Chen’s confidence-building comments during the company’s earnings call to dump a significant portion of his stake. The Wall Street Journal shares comments from two BlackBerry analysts following Lazardis’ move: “It’s smart for him to sell now, while it’s still a liquid stock,” said Daniel Ernst, an analyst at Hudson Square Research. “I think they’re finally seeing the writing on the wall,” said Edward Snyder, an analyst with Charter Reported by BGR India 11 hours ago.

Obituary: Cynthia Martha Todd

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Obituary: Cynthia Martha Todd Patch Norwood, MA --

Cynthia Martha Todd, 52, of Norwood, formerly of Chicopee, died on Monday, Dec. 23, at Norwood Hospital. Born March 2, 1961 in Holyoke, she was the daughter of the of the late William Daniel and Barbara Ann (Lecour) Todd. She leaves behind her life Reported by Patch 10 hours ago.

89% Rush

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A sleek, slick, well-oiled machine, Rush is a finely crafted sports drama with exhilarating race sequences and strong performances from Chris Hemsworth and Daniel Brühl. Reported by Rotten Tomatoes 10 hours ago.
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