31/10/2016 BBC News at Six


31/10/2016

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Anger and disappointment after the government rejects

:00:00.:00:00.

an inquiry into one of the worst clashes of the miners' strike.

:00:07.:00:13.

It was called the "Battle of Orgreave".

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The police are accused of using excessive violence,

:00:16.:00:18.

but ministers say a new investigation is not needed.

:00:19.:00:25.

There were no miscarriages of justice.

:00:26.:00:26.

Aren't we right in concluding that the establishment stitch-up that she

:00:27.:00:37.

has just announced today is nothing more than a nakedly political act?

:00:38.:00:44.

Jail for the lorry driver distracted by choosing music on his phone.

:00:45.:00:52.

He killed a mother and three children.

:00:53.:00:56.

What do you do - sit down and just keep typing?

:00:57.:01:01.

A campaign boost for Donald Trump after the latest twist in the Hilary

:01:02.:01:05.

The first hit of the day - as drug-related deaths hit record

:01:06.:01:10.

levels, Glasgow offers addicts a safe place to inject themselves.

:01:11.:01:17.

Autumn serves up a riot of colour - how the unusually warm weather

:01:18.:01:20.

And coming up in the sport on BBC News:

:01:21.:01:27.

Worrying scenes at Kempton racecourse, with Champion jockey

:01:28.:01:30.

Jim Crowley and fellow rider Freddy Tylicki taken to hospital

:01:31.:01:32.

Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

:01:33.:01:57.

The government has been accused of an establishment stitch-up

:01:58.:02:01.

after the Home Secretary ruled out an inquiry into one of the most

:02:02.:02:05.

brutal clashes between the police and striking miners in 1984.

:02:06.:02:09.

It became known as the "Battle of Orgreave", and for decades

:02:10.:02:12.

campaigners have argued that South Yorkshire Police manufactured

:02:13.:02:17.

evidence after the event - precisely what the same force

:02:18.:02:19.

was found to have done five years later at Hillsborough.

:02:20.:02:22.

But Amber Rudd said that a review of the events of three decades ago

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would offer very few lessons for policing today.

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Dan Johnson has been following the story.

:02:29.:02:37.

The images of violence from Orgreave were unforgettable, but exactly what

:02:38.:02:45.

they show has been argued over for a generation. The miners kept up their

:02:46.:02:50.

campaign for what they regard as justice, but today anger and

:02:51.:02:53.

disappointment followed 30 years of bitterness. We say the decision is

:02:54.:03:00.

deeply disappointing, and absolutely unacceptable. It is nearly 32 years

:03:01.:03:06.

since 95 miners were arrested at Orgreave. Some of those miners are

:03:07.:03:13.

dead now, and the surviving 1's face the prospect of more time, more

:03:14.:03:19.

delay, before we get truth and justice.

:03:20.:03:20.

This was the moment that stands their campaign. I have concluded

:03:21.:03:27.

that there is no case for either a statutory enquiry or an independent

:03:28.:03:32.

review. The opposition cried cover up. Are we right in concluding that

:03:33.:03:37.

the establishment stitch up that she has just announced today is nothing

:03:38.:03:43.

more than a nakedly political act? The Orgreave families and

:03:44.:03:47.

campaigners need the same justice as Hillsborough had. They need the same

:03:48.:03:50.

type of independent enquiry to establish the truth. In this

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situation, in Orgreave, there were no miscarriages of justice. There

:03:59.:04:02.

were no deaths. There were no convictions. This is an astonishing

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and frankly shameful decision. The government have led those families

:04:12.:04:13.

up the garden path for the last two years. For the miners, this was an

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aggressive overreaction by the police, a deliberate use of force to

:04:21.:04:24.

show they couldn't win the strike. The police say they had to uphold

:04:25.:04:30.

the law, in the face of an angry crowd set on disrupting industry and

:04:31.:04:34.

even overthrowing the government. The miners have always believed

:04:35.:04:38.

there was police brutality that day, and that many of them were

:04:39.:04:43.

unlawfully arrested, and that police statements were dictated to prove

:04:44.:04:50.

more serious charges against them. Today, the Home Secretary was clear

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- these issues will now be left to live. But moving on will not be easy

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for miners like mix. Wrongful arrest, false prosecution, and

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perjury that was committed by the police. Basically, I feel it is a

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massive injustice, and I think an enquiry would help provide these

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answers I'm wanting, but also put some safeguards in place that it

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will not happen again. But there are other voices welcoming today's

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decision. I think it's completely right. It's about events long ago,

:05:30.:05:35.

and events where the facts are quite clearly known. They are all

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recorded. There is no difficulty about that. The fact there was no

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loss of life here and nobody was convicted led the Home Secretary to

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conclude Orgreave isn't worthy of re-examination, but it's a decision

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that will not be easily accepted by those who say there are still

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unanswered questions. It is proving to be a very

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contentious decision. What is the government's decision? One minor who

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was there on that day who came to Westminster to hear that decision

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was physically shaking when he talked about it. It seemed he simply

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could not believe what he heard. Ministers say they have looked at

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all the evidence but concluded there were not wrongful convictions,

:06:28.:06:31.

nobody lost their lives, despite the horrors of the day, and they wonder

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what an enquiry would actually achieve. They say how the police

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operate has already changed beyond all recognition. Enquiries, at great

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cost and great duration, are often set up to work out what went wrong

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to ensure it doesn't happen again. In the case of Orgreave, they

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believe things have already changed beyond all recognition, so having a

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costly enquiry would not be worth it. This could hardly be more

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political and more personal. It speaks to the decades of tension now

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between mining communities in the north of England and the

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Conservative Party. The tension and the raw disappointment we saw today

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was plain for all to see. Public enquiries are very easy to call for.

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Politicians do it very often. They are very difficult to turn down. One

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Cabinet minister said to me of Orgreave, the hardest thing was to

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say no. Thank you. A lorry driver who killed a mother

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and three children when his truck crashed into their stationary car

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while he was distracted by his mobile phone was today

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jailed for ten years. Tomasz Kroker hit a line

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of traffic at 50mph The mother of one of the victims

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warned of the dangers of using mobile phones,

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and said the sentence The precious moments of a family

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life that no longer exists. Here, brothers Ethan and Josh, and their

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sister, Aimee. The three children killed in this horrific crash. They

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died, together with their mother Tracy, at the end of what had been a

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family holiday. They were killed by this man, Tomasz Kroker, seen here

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on his mobile phone just before the crash. Cameras in his lorry show him

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scrolling through his music for up to 45 seconds before impact. He

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slammed into four vehicles, including the one carrying Tracy and

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their children, killing them instantly. Kroker can be seen here

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on the left in the hooded top moments after the crash. Tracy's

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partner Mark had been behind her car in the silver is state on the right

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that shunted her vehicle under the blue lorry. We pulled up behind some

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lorries just crawling along. We slowed right down. And then that was

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it. Bang! And I looked down at this car, and, my God. The crash happened

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last August on the a 34 in Berkshire. The judge said it was

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like the lorry driver, Tomasz Kroker, had been driving with his

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eyes closed. The mother of 13-year-old Aimee, one of the four

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who died, said using mobile phones whilst driving had devastating

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consequences. Mr Kroker's use of his mobile phone whilst driving turned

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his lorry into a lethal weapon. It only takes a second of distraction

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to kill someone, destroying your life, your family's lives, and those

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of your victim and their family. Today's outcome must serve as a

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reminder to us all of our responsibilities every time we

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drive, and that decisions we make can be fatal. Tomasz Kroker was

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today jailed for a total of ten years after admitting dangerous

:10:13.:10:16.

driving. His victims' family say this was one of the worst incidents

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of its kind involving a mobile phone, wholly unavoidable, and

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leaving them utterly inconsolable. We can join Duncan now. Just clarify

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exactly what the law says on these matters. The law on using mobile

:10:32.:10:39.

phones is very clear. We have had this advice tonight from the

:10:40.:10:42.

Department for Transport, it is illegal to use a mobile phone whilst

:10:43.:10:47.

you are driving, or when you are at traffic lights or in queueing

:10:48.:10:52.

traffic. It is legal to use a mobile phone if you are parked, or in dire

:10:53.:10:58.

emergencies, when you can make a 999 call on the move. It is also illegal

:10:59.:11:02.

to use a hands-free set or a sat nav, -- it is also illegal to use,

:11:03.:11:13.

but if police see you using it unsafely, you could be stopped. But

:11:14.:11:21.

in this case, Tomasz Kroker was using his phone, with devastating

:11:22.:11:21.

circumstances. Within the last few minutes, it's

:11:22.:11:24.

been announced that the Governor of the Bank of England,

:11:25.:11:27.

Mark Carney, is to stay Live now to our business editor

:11:28.:11:29.

Simon Jack in Downing Street. I guess this will please disarm and

:11:30.:11:42.

annoy others. This was a surprise signing of the former resident of 11

:11:43.:11:47.

Downing Street in 2011. The intention was him to serve up to

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eight years, but with an option after 2018 saying he could leave

:11:54.:11:57.

after that. He had to make up his mind this year if he was going to

:11:58.:12:02.

use that extension. In the last few minutes, he's confirmed he will

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extend that stay by just a single year, to June 20 19. Crucially, that

:12:09.:12:14.

takes us beyond the period where we trigger Article 50, so he clearly

:12:15.:12:18.

thinks there is unfinished business to do, and his attitude towards

:12:19.:12:23.

Brexit, which has angered some - he was considered by many in the

:12:24.:12:30.

cabinet as the chief of Project Fear. He warned that the pound could

:12:31.:12:36.

fall, and it did. When he decided to reduce interest rates further a few

:12:37.:12:40.

months ago, people said he had overdone it, and that Project Fear

:12:41.:12:45.

was still alive and well. There are not many jobs for the Bank of

:12:46.:12:48.

England Governor to go to. The head of the World Bank, the head of the

:12:49.:12:54.

IMF, those jobs are already taken. The head of the bank in Canada, his

:12:55.:13:01.

home country, is already taken. The him to stay one year and not three

:13:02.:13:03.

is a bit of a surprise. Thank you. Iraqi troops trying to drive

:13:04.:13:08.

so-called Islamic State from its stronghold in the country

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have advanced to the outskirts The assault - now in its third week

:13:11.:13:13.

- involves hundreds of troops in heavily-armoured vehicles,

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together with tanks and bulldozers, all supported by US-led

:13:19.:13:20.

coalition air strikes. Our correspondent,

:13:21.:13:21.

Ian Pannell, is travelling The final battle for Mosul is

:13:22.:13:33.

getting close. Many expected these troops to pause, but that isn't what

:13:34.:13:38.

happened today. It has just gone 6am, and as you can see, a large

:13:39.:13:45.

military convoy is moving. We are with one section of the

:13:46.:13:48.

counterterrorism force, and we are told there was an armoured division

:13:49.:13:52.

that will move its way through the desert. There a column of special

:13:53.:13:57.

Forces and a counterterrorism unit who will advance on the last two

:13:58.:14:02.

villages before Mosul. We are also told that if they have enough

:14:03.:14:08.

momentum and are able to move, they will not stop. The roads have been

:14:09.:14:12.

laced with home-made bombs that have killed many. The convoy picks its

:14:13.:14:17.

own path through the desert. The armoured column has now moved out of

:14:18.:14:22.

the desert in a flanking manoeuvre, just going round the town of

:14:23.:14:29.

Bazwaya. We are in the lead vehicle here with the commander of

:14:30.:14:35.

counterterrorism forces. Over there is the town of Bazwaya, where they

:14:36.:14:40.

are going to try to get to. If they manage to get through there, they

:14:41.:14:42.

will move even further towards their main target. We are moving along now

:14:43.:14:53.

inside a heavily armoured vehicle. There are two soldiers in the front

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here, and this man's foot belongs to a gunner up in the turret, carrying

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large calibre weapons, into what they think or Islamic State

:15:10.:15:13.

positions. We are now moving into the town of Bazwaya, which will put

:15:14.:15:21.

us within eyesight of Mosul. The troops fought their way into

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Bazwaya. The last town standing between the Iraqi government and the

:15:27.:15:28.

so-called Islamic State. And the closer they get, the fears

:15:29.:15:47.

of the resistance. Units within the counterterrorism unit have just

:15:48.:15:52.

advanced into this area. They have just opened attack on what they

:15:53.:15:56.

think IS positions. We've just been told to get back into the vehicles.

:15:57.:16:00.

They have another unit coming from the other side of the town. Fighter

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jets are trying to give them cover overhead. A very confused and

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dangerous situation. The few families left here have been trapped

:16:11.:16:14.

between warring parties for years. If they are ever to live in peace,

:16:15.:16:20.

this campaign needs a plan for what comes after the war. Today has been

:16:21.:16:26.

a successful mission for the counterterrorism forces. They

:16:27.:16:29.

managed to take the last town before the city of Mosul. The operations

:16:30.:16:35.

have stopped for today. They are now less than a mile away from the heart

:16:36.:16:41.

of the Islamic caliphate. More families homeless, more lives lost,

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and the real battle is yet to come. The Government has ruled out

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a public inquiry into a violent confrontation between police

:16:48.:16:53.

and striking miners in 1984. Still the column. I am with the

:16:54.:17:11.

Donald Trump campaign just outside Detroit, where there is renewed

:17:12.:17:12.

buoyancy among his supporters. Coming up in Sportsday on BBC News:

:17:13.:17:14.

Olympic skeleton champion Lizzy Yarnold says she may not

:17:15.:17:16.

compete in next year's World Championships in Sochi,

:17:17.:17:19.

Russia, because she believes her Officials in Glasgow are expected

:17:20.:17:21.

to approve a controversial plan to set up the UK's first so-called

:17:22.:17:31.

'self-injecting rooms', where drug addicts can inject

:17:32.:17:36.

heroin and also smoke The scheme aims to address

:17:37.:17:38.

the problems caused by an estimated 500 users who inject

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on Glasgow's streets. Our social affairs correspondent,

:17:45.:17:48.

Michael Buchanan, has more details. We came to this wasteland

:17:49.:17:53.

to see the remnants The necessary tools of a heroin

:17:54.:17:55.

addiction strewn far and wide. Up to 500 people inject heroin

:17:56.:18:04.

in public in Glasgow. Within minutes, we'd been joined

:18:05.:18:08.

by two of them. They'd come for the

:18:09.:18:13.

first hit of the day. Moments later, I watched

:18:14.:18:16.

as the heroin kicked in. With such problems, plans are afoot

:18:17.:18:29.

to open the UK's first consumption centre -

:18:30.:18:38.

a clinic where addicts can Safe-injecting rooms

:18:39.:18:40.

would save a lot of lives. Coming to places like this,

:18:41.:18:48.

as you can see, it's certainly not And then you come here

:18:49.:18:51.

at night-time, there's nae guarantee you're

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going to walk back out. Drug-related deaths are at record

:18:56.:18:57.

levels across Britain and experts say the spike in new HIV infections

:18:58.:19:04.

in Glasgow last year was mainly due But it's also an issue

:19:05.:19:07.

of public safety. This neighbourhood has had to live

:19:08.:19:13.

with the dangers of used There was a girl stays up

:19:14.:19:16.

here as well and she went to put her baby in the pram

:19:17.:19:25.

and there was needles There was a needle

:19:26.:19:28.

in the kid's pram? This is a safe-consumption

:19:29.:19:31.

room in Denmark. Needles are cleaned and kept

:19:32.:19:36.

on-site, protecting both Glasgow's drug services

:19:37.:19:40.

are highly regarded, but officials believe more is needed

:19:41.:19:46.

to help street users. One option would see addicts

:19:47.:19:49.

bring their own drugs to the clinic and hopefully engage

:19:50.:19:52.

with other services. We know that a lot of people that

:19:53.:19:56.

are in this situation are homeless, have mental and physical health

:19:57.:20:00.

problems, so it's not just teaching This pharmacy highlights

:20:01.:20:02.

the drug problem. It has a separate entrance for users

:20:03.:20:15.

of methadone, But opening consumption rooms

:20:16.:20:17.

will not reduce demand, It's effectively legalising drugs

:20:18.:20:20.

and providing people with easy It's promoted, I think,

:20:21.:20:23.

by people who in many instances have given up on the idea of recovery,

:20:24.:20:29.

and their most convincing and persuasive suggestion

:20:30.:20:32.

is to enable people to use illegal That is not how Scotland should be

:20:33.:20:34.

tackling its drugs problem. Heroin addiction has ravaged

:20:35.:20:40.

the lives of many in Dealing with that legacy has now put

:20:41.:20:43.

the city at the forefront Michael Buchanan, BBC News,

:20:44.:20:49.

Glasgow. A man has been jailed for life

:20:50.:21:00.

for murdering a waiter nearly 18 years ago -

:21:01.:21:03.

in a retrial under Ronnie Coulter was convicted

:21:04.:21:05.

at the High Court in Glasgow earlier this month of

:21:06.:21:08.

stabbing the 32 year old. Mr Chhokar died as he returned

:21:09.:21:11.

from work at an Indian restaurant The champion jockey Jim Crowley,

:21:12.:21:13.

and another rider Freddie Tylicki have been taken to hospital

:21:14.:21:27.

with what are believed to be serious spinal injuries,

:21:28.:21:30.

after four horses fell Two other jockeys who fell were able

:21:31.:21:33.

to walk off the course. It's the issue that's dogged

:21:34.:21:41.

Hillary Clinton's campaign Her use of private email

:21:42.:21:43.

for official business when she was Secretary of State has

:21:44.:21:51.

been exploited by Donald Trump, Over the weekend, the FBI announced

:21:52.:21:54.

it had found new emails, relevant to their original

:21:55.:21:58.

investigation into the issue. As our chief correspondent

:21:59.:21:59.

Gavin Hewitt reports, that's revived the Trump campaign

:22:00.:22:01.

and hurt Clinton's. Tell me about your job,

:22:02.:22:06.

when you got started... Hillary Clinton drops by Betty's

:22:07.:22:08.

Diner. There aren't many votes

:22:09.:22:18.

to be had here but, surrounded by new controversy,

:22:19.:22:20.

she needs to fire up her traditional support

:22:21.:22:22.

from the African-American community. She and her aides are troubled

:22:23.:22:26.

by signs the new inquiry into her But returning back late

:22:27.:22:29.

after another long day campaigning, she and her team believe they retain

:22:30.:22:35.

an advantage and organisation, While in office, Hillary Clinton

:22:36.:22:39.

relied on a private e-mail account on her own server,

:22:40.:22:42.

sending thousands of messages both The FBI said that was negligent,

:22:43.:22:45.

but they did not press charges. Now - in a separate case

:22:46.:22:53.

involving the husband of one of her close aides -

:22:54.:22:56.

more of Mrs Clinton's e-mails have come to light and the FBI has

:22:57.:22:59.

reopened its investigation. Hillary Clinton's running mate today

:23:00.:23:02.

addressed the issue. The FBI put up this very unusual

:23:03.:23:06.

letter, very unprecedented. They're not supposed to talk

:23:07.:23:10.

about ongoing investigations and they're also not generally

:23:11.:23:14.

supposed to put out politically sensitive stuff right

:23:15.:23:16.

before an election. You know, there may

:23:17.:23:19.

be some distractions, Some Democrats have turned

:23:20.:23:20.

on the FBI, accusing the bureau of breaking the law by revealing

:23:21.:23:25.

the politically sensitive information so close

:23:26.:23:27.

to the election. It's far from clear

:23:28.:23:32.

whether the latest FBI inquiry has changed many minds amongst

:23:33.:23:34.

Hillary Clinton supporters, but on one thing, everybody agrees -

:23:35.:23:37.

if the focus is on Hillary Clinton and her e-mails, then it's not

:23:38.:23:40.

on Trump and his scandals, Donald Trump calls the finding of

:23:41.:23:43.

650,000 e-mails 'a big bombshell'. It doesn't matter that nothing has

:23:44.:23:58.

been proved or that the e-mails may be duplicates of those already

:23:59.:24:01.

studied, he denounces Hillary Clinton's actions

:24:02.:24:04.

as 'crooked and illegal'. But how do you have

:24:05.:24:14.

that many e-mails? What do you do, sit down all day

:24:15.:24:16.

and just keep typing? Hey, no wonder nothing gets done

:24:17.:24:19.

in our country! It may well be that the e-mails

:24:20.:24:21.

will not be examined before polling day, but Democrats had wanted

:24:22.:24:24.

the election to be a referendum on Trump and his fitness to be

:24:25.:24:27.

President. In these final days, all

:24:28.:24:29.

the attention is on his opponent. That's taught our North America

:24:30.:24:44.

editor who is outside Detroit. We thought we had seen everything in

:24:45.:24:48.

this campaign and now this new latest twist.

:24:49.:24:53.

Yes, George, it has left the Trump campaign, it has never been a

:24:54.:24:57.

particular study of calm and serenity and as well as the raucous

:24:58.:25:01.

list, you now have a sense of euphoria among many of his

:25:02.:25:04.

supporters gathered for a rally that will take place shortly. The normal

:25:05.:25:08.

rule of thumb in politics is that you want to be in the headlines, you

:25:09.:25:12.

want to dominate the agenda. Not this campaign. Whenever Donald Trump

:25:13.:25:16.

has been in the headlines, it was great news for Hillary Clinton. And

:25:17.:25:20.

when Hillary Clinton has been in the headlines, it is great news for

:25:21.:25:23.

Donald Trump. As it is at the moment. Americans are getting ready

:25:24.:25:28.

to celebrate Halloween tonight. Well, a lot of people in the Clinton

:25:29.:25:33.

campaign of feeling that she has been tricked while in Donald Trump

:25:34.:25:36.

land, they are feeling that he has been given a mighty treat!

:25:37.:25:39.

Thank you very much. It's as beautiful as

:25:40.:25:43.

a picture postcard - trees in many parts of Britain

:25:44.:25:45.

are only just starting It's all down to the unusual weather

:25:46.:25:47.

- a hot September and warm October. The Bodenham Arboretum

:25:48.:25:55.

near Kidderminster, and just Our mild autumn, no high winds

:25:56.:25:57.

or cold snaps could mean our trees might stay looking like this,

:25:58.:26:06.

well, for a while. It is unusual, but autumns

:26:07.:26:13.

have been getting later. We'd normally have really good

:26:14.:26:17.

colour well into November, but this year is spectacular

:26:18.:26:25.

and we've had more colour, If this weather continues,

:26:26.:26:28.

then they're going to stay here The groundwork for these dazzling

:26:29.:26:31.

displays was laid back in spring. The heavy rains we experienced then

:26:32.:26:36.

- coupled with above-average sunshine - meant a great

:26:37.:26:38.

growing season for trees. Well, the leaves of trees store

:26:39.:26:40.

chlorophyll, the green pigment in plants that's

:26:41.:26:46.

vital for photosynthesis. As winter approaches,

:26:47.:26:53.

the chlorophyll breaks down, the pigment goes and other

:26:54.:26:55.

coloured chemicals takeover. And so you have the yellows,

:26:56.:26:59.

reds and gold. Well, that's the science lesson

:27:00.:27:01.

over. For now, let's just

:27:02.:27:02.

enjoy the picture. It has been beautiful, but don't get

:27:03.:27:10.

used to it. All set to change, we have seen

:27:11.:27:26.

atmospheric weather pictures but it has been an amazing start to

:27:27.:27:30.

Halloween with a foggy morning first thing. Quite a lot of low cloud and

:27:31.:27:35.

Fog as depicted by this picture, across parts of Lincolnshire. But

:27:36.:27:39.

once the fog lifted, what a difference! Lovely spells of

:27:40.:27:44.

sunshine and warmth, the warmest Halloween day across West Wales on

:27:45.:27:49.

record. But across the far North, we saw a cooler and fresher feel with a

:27:50.:27:53.

lot of cloud because of this weather front. It continues to head South.

:27:54.:27:58.

Behind it, fresh weather. To the South of that, we will continue to

:27:59.:28:03.

see quite a lot of fog forming. That is worth bearing in mind if you are

:28:04.:28:09.

out and about on the roads early. Patchy but dense fog in places and

:28:10.:28:13.

favoured spots across the M4 corridor, through South Wales,

:28:14.:28:17.

towards the London area. That is worth bearing in mind first thing in

:28:18.:28:21.

the morning. And unlike today, it will lift today, but only the low

:28:22.:28:25.

cloud. It is a great and cool day with the weather front bringing some

:28:26.:28:30.

rain. Behind it, brighter conditions to the North and West with decent

:28:31.:28:34.

sunshine. But look at the feel of things. 7-12d, maybe 15 in the

:28:35.:28:42.

south-west. That is a shock to the system. Clear skies by Dave reads

:28:43.:28:46.

the clear skies overnight and a widespread frost. The first

:28:47.:28:49.

significant frost across the country this winter. It will start with blue

:28:50.:28:52.

sky and sunshine, more of a breeze to the East, but further

:28:53.:28:57.

West, it will feel noticeably fresher.

:28:58.:28:59.

Now on BBC One we join the BBC's news teams where you are.

:29:00.:29:02.

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