Sleeping street awakes to the sound of a battering ram

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Thursday, January 28, 2010
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This is Staffordshire

THE early morning peace in

a sleepy Leek street was shattered by the sound of a battering ram taking a front door off its hinges.

A young boy in his school uniform could be seen inside a targeted house after police in helmets and armoured uniforms stormed inside to search for drugs.

Most homes in Haregate Road were still in darkness when the raid on the respectable-looking semi-detached property took place.

A van-load of officers pulled up quietly in nearby Tittesworth Avenue at around 7am.

The team identified their target and wasted no time in starting their assault on the uPVC front door.

As officers began to force their way in, shouts could be heard from inside the house. Seconds later, most of the door lay on the grass in the front garden while officers poured in.

Those inside the property were detained before officers started a thorough search that would take a couple of hours.

The street, which would soon be busy with children on their way to nearby Churnet View Middle School, remained quiet despite the disruption. A few neighbours peered out from behind their curtains, but nobody ventured outside.

With the search under way, a police sniffer dog was brought to the house and officers erected the Operation Nemesis flag to let the surrounding community know what was happening.

Residents then began to appear, but carried on with their daily business, trying not to pay too much attention to the police activity.

Meanwhile in Knutton, police carried out two simultaneous raids at separate addresses just a few doors apart in Moran Road.

Two vans pulled up at about 7am and more than 20 officers walked up the street armed with protective equipment and battering rams.

Residents could be seen peeping through their windows as officers began to force entry to the properties, sending a deafening noise down the road. At one address, the occupant had barricaded his front door with wood and several officers were involved in trying to bash it down.

After a few minutes, officers who had made their way to the back of the property managed to gain entry and met the occupant at the back door.

They signalled their success with a cheer and the team flooded in.

Lights then appeared across the rest of the house as they began an extensive search. Specialist sniffer dogs were brought in and officers could be seen from outside the property combing the house for evidence.

Neighbours setting out for work or taking their dogs for a walk said they were not shocked by the early morning proceedings as they had witnessed several raids in the road over the past year.

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4 Comments

  • Profile image for This is Staffordshire

    by stephen, meir

    Saturday, February 27 2010, 12:40PM

    “will we get the follow up story in the same prose such as when they werein court they got a slap on the hand (then sacked for giving said slap)told they were a naughty boy(sacked again for mental cruelty)and sent of home”

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    by Catie Raynor, fenton

    Friday, January 29 2010, 1:19PM

    “I thought this story was great. What's wrong with a bit of descriptive flair? It's not as if they aren't reporting the facts and there is also a main story to accompany this article. Don't kid yourselves, there is no such thing as objective reporting in any form of journalism, everyone has an angle but how boring would a news story be if it just stuck to the "5Ws" without any style? You may as well just publish law reports or official documents!

    It is hardly giving away state secrets what with all the reality cop shows on the telly, such as the excellent Road Wars. Dawn raids and battering rams are common knowledge. Publicity is also a deterrent to potential drug dealers and a way for the police to manage people's perception of crime.

    It is more amusing that the author is clearly trying to stir up some negativity by statements such as "The street, which would soon be busy with children on their way to nearby Churnet View Middle School" and "Residents then began to appear, but carried on with their daily business, trying not to pay too much attention to the police activity." [cue hysterical comments about disrupting beauty sleep or inconvenience of getting to work] Everyone at the sentinel must know that the ill informed and troll comments made anonymously by the minority are often the most entertaining part of the story so fair play to the journalist who obviously wants to make this story someting more interesting and entertaining.

    Regional journalism, and individual style, should be encouraged. I would like to encourage the Sentinel to do more of this and also consider the general on-line publication of bylines to articles.”

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    by HP, North Staffs

    Friday, January 29 2010, 12:14PM

    “I agree - I thought this was a fictitious account of an event rather than a news story. The 'author' obviously harbours a desire to write novels rather than factual news stories. Not appropriate or necessary - what happened to the straightforward, objective 5 Ws (+1H)?!”

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    by Geoff, Ex Cop

    Friday, January 29 2010, 9:32AM

    “WOW, Talk about Mills and Boon.
    All this story needed to say was Police carried out several warrants today under the Misuse of Drugs Act in North Staffs . . .X number of people have been detained,
    Why give out tactics, equiptment and Flower everything up . . . Are we not trying to beat these people or are we helping them to thwart the Police”

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