Caroline Crouch cops have been HONOURED in Greece despite them taking a month to catch killer husband who strangled her the-sun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from the-sun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
My daughter was murdered by her husband in the most unimaginable way â now he s driving us out of our home too All the mental problems I had after he did what he did⦠Theyâve all come back to the surface. Iâm just a nervous wreck now
05:00, 11 JUL 2021
Updated
More than ten years ago, Catherine Broomfield received news every mother dreads.
Her daughter, 23-year-old Kirsty Grabham, had been found dead.
The circumstances in which she died have haunted Catherine ever since, with her body being found in a suitcase along the side of the M4. Her husband, Paul Grabham, had thrown Kirsty out of a car window.
Hairdressers and beauty therapists to be trained to spot domestic abuse independent.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from independent.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A Bournemouth business has urged victims of domestic abuse to seek support as England football team progresses through Euro 2020. England will take on Denmark at Wembley in their next match on July 7 and concerns have arisen over the link between football matches and domestic violence. Julie Johns, Managing Director of the social enterprise Safe Space, said: Sadly there has long been a culture of domestic abuse amongst some football fans who are also perpetrators of domestic abuse. “However, neither football or alcohol are the cause of domestic abuse incidents, the need to exert power and control over another is. “Perpetrators use football and alcohol as the excuse to carry out violence and abuse towards their partners.
By Press Association 2021
Picture posed by a model of a shadow of a man with a clenched fist (Dominic Lipinski/PA)
Jewish women stay in abusive relationships two years longer than the national average due to a fear of “bringing shame” on their families, a charity has warned, as figures showed a 62% spike in calls to their domestic violence helpline during the pandemic.
Jewish Women’s Aid (JWA) supported 465 Jewish women and girls through domestic abuse and sexual violence support services between April 2020 and March 2021, with the time spent directly supporting clients increasing by 37%.
The charity said lockdown measures had been “used as an opportunity by perpetrators to abuse women”, as calls to its helpline rose to 285, an increase of 62%.