25/11/2013

Download Subtitles

Transcript

:00:11. > :00:25.Hello and welcome to Monday's Look North. Tonight: Why police are being

:00:26. > :00:30.called out thousands of times year to deal with dementia sufferers..

:00:31. > :00:33.Will campaigners win their battle to bring the remains of King Richard

:00:34. > :00:37.the Third back to the North? And Lusty Linda ` a 1950s bomber ` makes

:00:38. > :00:40.a spectacular 110 mile an hour commemorative dash Caring for a

:00:41. > :00:45.family member with dementia is one of the toughest tests a relative

:00:46. > :01:09.will ever have to go through. Sunderland seeing red.

:01:10. > :01:13.Caring for family member with dementia is one of the toughest test

:01:14. > :01:17.the relative will have to go through. But imagine how much more

:01:18. > :01:20.difficult it is if a loved one's condition is causing them to be

:01:21. > :01:23.violent. Now it's emerged that police are being called out

:01:24. > :01:26.thousands of times a year in our region, to deal with dementia

:01:27. > :01:29.sufferers. In some cases, those patients are actually being put in

:01:30. > :01:32.handcuffs to restrain them. Campaigners say it's a problem that

:01:33. > :01:36.could get much worse in our ageing society. For this special Look North

:01:37. > :01:41.Report, Gerry Jackson has been to meet one woman who speaks from very

:01:42. > :01:56.personal, and painful, experience. He was kind`hearted and very gentle.

:01:57. > :02:00.He was not aggressive, in any way. Happy memories of a loving family

:02:01. > :02:02.man, but even here, in his 40s, Glenn Davison was developing

:02:03. > :02:11.early`onset dementia. As the condition took hold, his behaviour

:02:12. > :02:15.became erractic and volatile. The children had a hard time. He would

:02:16. > :02:24.often accuse them of stealing his possessions. He would get angry and

:02:25. > :02:26.frightened them. He was so confused, and so frightened, really.

:02:27. > :02:30.Eventually, Glenn had to be admitted to a care home in Northumberland.

:02:31. > :02:34.Still a strong man, he assaulted two staff members. The police were

:02:35. > :02:41.called to restrain him. He was sectioned and sent to hospital. It

:02:42. > :02:45.was only when I went to see him that he flinched and shouted and when I

:02:46. > :02:55.pulled his sleeves up and he had lacerations and bruising. When you

:02:56. > :02:59.realised what he had gone through, how did you feel? I was devastated

:03:00. > :03:06.because I think it would've been frightened and traumatised. He

:03:07. > :03:08.would've been pulling against them and that would've been pulling

:03:09. > :03:10.against them and that would have made frightened.

:03:11. > :03:12.Figures obtained by the BBC suggest police are responding to

:03:13. > :03:19.dementia`related incidents ever more frequently. In 2011, for example,

:03:20. > :03:23.Northumbria Police alone were called out more than 2,000 times. In the

:03:24. > :03:32.Cleveland and Durham force areas, the figures are going up year on

:03:33. > :03:36.year. I was surprised and shocked. Why would you put handcuffs on

:03:37. > :03:41.somebody who was confused and frightened? I can't imagine anybody

:03:42. > :03:43.else in society putting up with such treatment.

:03:44. > :03:47.Of course, not all callouts result in this kind of restraint. Figures

:03:48. > :03:56.for the use of handcuffs are not available. Northumbria Police says

:03:57. > :03:59.all its officers are trained in mental health guidelines and proper

:04:00. > :04:02.restraint techniques. And in some places they're going further. Any

:04:03. > :04:11.officer at York Railway Station sees a lot of human life. Some of these

:04:12. > :04:17.people we know we'll have dementia. It is up to those on the station

:04:18. > :04:22.here to know how to recognise that. We don't want to take a person with

:04:23. > :04:24.dementia and put them in a police environment when they should not be

:04:25. > :04:26.there and it can cause them more distress.

:04:27. > :04:29.Fiona and her unit are one of only a handful in Europe to undergo

:04:30. > :04:34.advanced training in dementia awareness. The dementia training we

:04:35. > :04:37.have had will get the best information out of them rather than

:04:38. > :04:42.close them down. I'd like to think that in the years to come, should

:04:43. > :04:46.something happen to me, there will be a system in place that will make

:04:47. > :04:50.it a lot easier for people with By the age of 80, one in six of us will

:04:51. > :04:52.be affected by dementia. Dementia to a gate in society.

:04:53. > :04:56.Increasing numbers of us are living to that age. Even now, 800,000

:04:57. > :05:02.people are living with dementia`related conditions. There

:05:03. > :05:06.is an incredible stigma still attached to dementia. That is

:05:07. > :05:09.something we really want to crack. We know people with dementia want to

:05:10. > :05:14.do that as well. They do want people to cross the road when they are

:05:15. > :05:18.walking towards them. This could blaze a trail for the way we

:05:19. > :05:20.interact with people with dementia. And for every sufferer, there are

:05:21. > :05:30.loved ones living through it with them.

:05:31. > :05:32.Well, Gerry is with me now. We heard concerns there about police

:05:33. > :05:35.treatment, but realistically, what alternative is there for the police

:05:36. > :05:39.when they're called out to an incident when a dementia patient has

:05:40. > :05:43.been violent? It is delicate. Police say if

:05:44. > :05:51.somebody is agitated all violent or a danger to others or themselves,

:05:52. > :06:00.they will attend. In Allison's case, police pointed out that Velcro

:06:01. > :06:04.restraints are available. She feels softer approach would have been more

:06:05. > :06:12.suitable. We're talking about compassion and care, availability of

:06:13. > 2:38:21hospital births and so on. There are many thousands of people watching

2:38:22 > 2:38:21this who will one day be suffering from an age related mental

2:38:22 > 2:38:21condition. These are questions for all of us.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21A grandmother accused of murdering her son's former partner after being

2:38:22 > 2:38:21told she'd be cut off from contact with her young grandson has today

2:38:22 > 2:38:21given her account of how the killing happened. Heather Emmonds, who's 58,

2:38:22 > 2:38:21stabbed 42`year`old Tina Casey to death at Miss Casey's home in

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Holywell, near Shiremoor. The killing came to light after the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21police attended a road traffic accident and found Mrs Emmonds

2:38:22 > 2:38:21inside a car with a number of hand` written notes confessing to the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21killing. Chris Stewart has the story.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21The lead`up to the killing in the words of the killer. That's what the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21jury's heard today. That what happened here came after a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21long`running series of rows between Tina Casey and her former partner

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Keith Emmonds, with his mother Heather Emmonds often trying to act

2:38:22 > 2:38:21as peacemaker. And that she'd arrived at this house one fateful

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Sunday morning to try to smooth over another problem. The jury heard

2:38:22 > 2:38:21there was around where Tina threatened to take her son awake to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21the Isle of Man. Apparently, she accused Mrs Emmons of being a bad

2:38:22 > 2:38:21grandmother. Mrs Emmons said she was fed up and had had enough, and she

2:38:22 > 2:38:21thought it was all me, me, me. In tears, she said she took a knife of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21a table and repeatedly stabbed Tina. She admits killing Miss Casey,

2:38:22 > 2:38:21but denies murder on the grounds of loss of control and diminished

2:38:22 > 2:38:21responsibility. More than 40,000 public sector jobs

2:38:22 > 2:38:21have been lost in the region since 2008. But six out of ten members of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21the North East Entrepeneurs' Forum say they're NOW feeling "more

2:38:22 > 2:38:21confident" about business ` with exports on the rise again. Mark

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Denten reports on the gains and losses in the region's jobs market.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Protesters outside Middlesbrough town hall. Plenty of sound, and

2:38:22 > 2:38:21quite a lot of fury. The council's announced 600 job losses ` just the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21latest in a whole raft of public sector cuts across the region. So

2:38:22 > 2:38:21where are the jobs to replace them? Well, partly here. This firm in

2:38:22 > 2:38:21County Durham makes craft supplies, and also has bases in California and

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Holland. But boss Sara started it all from her university bedroom. Now

2:38:22 > 2:38:21she employs 60 workers, some from the public sector. We have employed

2:38:22 > 2:38:21quite a lot of ex`public sector workers. It is a totally different

2:38:22 > 2:38:21pace, which is what I think people have found. It can be so rewarding.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21While this firm is taking on workers, many public sector jobs

2:38:22 > 2:38:21have been axed. What are the numbers? Since 2008, the region's

2:38:22 > 2:38:21lost 42,000 public sector jobs. During the same period, 34,000

2:38:22 > 2:38:21private sector jobs have been created, but that's still a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21shortfall of 8,000 jobs. Marjorie knows all about that. She lost her

2:38:22 > 2:38:21job as a schools anti`bullying coordinator at Durham Council this

2:38:22 > 2:38:21year. She set up her own company providing similar services but now

2:38:22 > 2:38:21that's under threat. Some schools are saying we would

2:38:22 > 2:38:21love to have your services in school but we do not have the money. I will

2:38:22 > 2:38:21be very sad if it comes to the point where I must close down the service.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21A fluctuating picture ` some job losses, some job gains, but with the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21fate of our economy at stake. A homecoming parade was held in

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Carlisle this morning for soldiers from the second Battalion, the Duke

2:38:22 > 2:38:21of Lancaster's Regiment. 120 servicemen and woman marched through

2:38:22 > 2:38:21the town and an hour`long service was held in Carlisle Cathedral to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21give thanks for the safe return of all the battalion's soldiers from

2:38:22 > 2:38:21their last tour of Afghanistan. It's been a battle worthy of medieveal

2:38:22 > 2:38:21times, and now campaigners in York are one step away from a possible

2:38:22 > 2:38:21victory. Relatives of King Richard the Third who want his remains to be

2:38:22 > 2:38:21returned to Yorkshire take their case to the High Court tomorrow. He

2:38:22 > 2:38:21was the last king of the House of York, but is currently resting in

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Leicester, the city where they discovered his remains under a car

2:38:22 > 2:38:21park. The hearing tomorrow will make the final decision on where he's

2:38:22 > 2:38:21permanently laid to rest. Michelle Lyons reports. Richard III once

2:38:22 > 2:38:21again takes centre stage, not only here at York Theatre Royal this week

2:38:22 > 2:38:21but in the courtrooms in London, where the battle over where his

2:38:22 > 2:38:21bones should be buried continues. An archaeological dig by the University

2:38:22 > 2:38:21of Leicester discovered the remains of King Richard III and a car park

2:38:22 > 2:38:21in the city last September. University was granted a licence to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21inter them, but the king's descendants have challenged this

2:38:22 > 2:38:21decision, saying his final resting place should be here in York. They

2:38:22 > 2:38:21have taken their fight to the High Court. Richard was the only

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Yorkshire King. He grew up in North Yorkshire. His associations have

2:38:22 > 2:38:21always been with the North of England. We believe he should be

2:38:22 > 2:38:21buried here. Their legal team think they have a strong case. If we win,

2:38:22 > 2:38:21it means the process was flawed and the Ministry of Justice will have to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21go back to the drawing board and work out how they decide whether men

2:38:22 > 2:38:21should be buried. The court has indicated that should be done by way

2:38:22 > 2:38:21of an expert panel. At that stage, anybody who has an interest and has

2:38:22 > 2:38:21a voice that was to be head can put forward their point of view. There

2:38:22 > 2:38:21is no doubt this case has fuelled public interest, with more than

2:38:22 > 2:38:2130,000 people signing the petition backing the Alliance. An exhibition

2:38:22 > 2:38:21in York drew record crowd this year. The betrayed version of Richard III

2:38:22 > 2:38:21is of this hunchbacked baddy who killed his nephew. That has come

2:38:22 > 2:38:21historically through Shakespeare. It is Tudor propaganda, more than

2:38:22 > 2:38:21likely. For the people of York, we can see his popularity still today.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21The body of Richard III's sons lies in a village a few miles away from

2:38:22 > 2:38:21York. Tomorrow Bosman High Court hearing will determine whether the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21links are strong enough to challenge the existing burial plans. Another

2:38:22 > 2:38:21history lesson now. It was one of the great achievements of the 20th

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Century. 60 years ago, Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay,

2:38:22 > 2:38:21became the first to reach the summit of the World's highest mountain `

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Everest. But without their oxygen supplies their place in the history

2:38:22 > 2:38:21books would have literally disappeared into thin air. Now the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21very set of oxygen bottles Hillary took to the top of world has ended

2:38:22 > 2:38:21up on Tyneside. Andrew Hartley reports. The first men to the top of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21the world. Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Norgay. But imagine Hillary's ordeal. With the air so thin at

2:38:22 > 2:38:2129,000 feet ` his life relying on this. Now, 60 years later the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21aluminium frame carrying these heavy oxygen bottles has been restored at

2:38:22 > 2:38:21a workshop in North Shields. When someone says we have this iconic

2:38:22 > 2:38:21object, this priceless thing, will you make it straight, it is a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21tremendous honour. It was how I imagine a surgeon about to stick a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21knife in an important person must feel.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21The set of cylinders was made by a German company called Drager, and

2:38:22 > 2:38:21ended up at its factory in Blyth in Northumberland. He worked with

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Edmund Hillary at the time. We have had it for good few years now. We

2:38:22 > 2:38:21have done a restoration project on it, which is where we have got Bill

2:38:22 > 2:38:21involved. He is helping give it a bit more shape and restore it to how

2:38:22 > 2:38:21it was. The work has been carried out in the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21same building where another 20th century icon is being restored. The

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Bluebird. Donald Campbell died in 1967 when he lost control of this

2:38:22 > 2:38:21craft on Coniston Water in the Lake District whilst travelling at nearly

2:38:22 > 2:38:21300mph in a speed record attempt. How is a project going? We're

2:38:22 > 2:38:21plodding on. It is a big job. If you don't stop, you can't fail. We are

2:38:22 > 2:38:21still at it. The Yorkshire Air Museum dusted off

2:38:22 > 2:38:21one of its oldest exhibits today for a spectacular 110 mile an hour trip

2:38:22 > 2:38:21down its runway. Lusty Lindy, a 1950s bomber, arrived at the museum

2:38:22 > 2:38:21exactly 20 years ago. As Phil Connell's been finding out she's

2:38:22 > 2:38:21still in tip top condition. She is known as lusty Lindy. She a star

2:38:22 > 2:38:21exhibit. It was during 50s and 60s that the victory V bomber played a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21crucial role. The aircraft carried nuclear weapons. For the last 20

2:38:22 > 2:38:21years, though, she has enjoyed a more relaxing life in Yorkshire.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Until today, when two Magennis rhetoric, her engines were again

2:38:22 > 2:38:21ignited ` ` until today, when to mark the anniversary, her engines

2:38:22 > 2:38:21were again ignited. Volunteers keep her in pristine condition. The

2:38:22 > 2:38:21amount of hard work every body puts into it, it is like everything. When

2:38:22 > 2:38:21you have worked on something, you need that bit of pleasure, that end

2:38:22 > 2:38:21result. You at 2:15pm, the exact time she landed here, her engines

2:38:22 > 2:38:21began to rock. A spectacular 32nd `` and. ` ` the spectacular 30 second

2:38:22 > 2:38:21``. Who would believe it is over 60 years old? It is an amazing piece of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21iconic British history we are keeping preserved in Yorkshire.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21These are after 60 years, Lusty Lindy still has the power to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21impress. One of the best examples of British design and technology.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Very nice. Sport now. We kick off tonight with Newcastle

2:38:22 > 2:38:21who're up to eighth in the Premier League and just a couple of points

2:38:22 > 2:38:21off the Champions League places after beating former manager Chris

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Hughton's Norwich City on Saturday and that means the players are on

2:38:22 > 2:38:21course to pick up their bonuses this season. Yes, Joe Kinnear the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Director of Football has revealed that they agreed to a bonus scheme

2:38:22 > 2:38:21which will only pay out if the Magpies finish in the top ten rather

2:38:22 > 2:38:21than the top 12 as it used to be. It's their third successive league

2:38:22 > 2:38:21win after beating Chelsea and Tottenham ` happy days for Newcastle

2:38:22 > 2:38:21fans! And with the team full of confidence, they made the most of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21some poor Norwich defending when Loic Remy headed in Yohan Cabaye's

2:38:22 > 2:38:21corner after just two minutes ` that's his eighth goal in as many

2:38:22 > 2:38:21games. Their first goal from a corner for two years ` but Remy

2:38:22 > 2:38:21wasn't the only man in form. Shola Ameobi frequently took the Norwich

2:38:22 > 2:38:21defence apart and set up Yoan Gouffran for Newcastle's second goal

2:38:22 > 2:38:21` his own header parried into the path of the frenchman for his fourth

2:38:22 > 2:38:21goal of the season. Ameobi continued to pepper the Norwich goal with

2:38:22 > 2:38:21shots ` the prospect of playing in the World Cup in Brazil for Nigeria

2:38:22 > 2:38:21seems to have given him a new lease of life. Norwich did improve after

2:38:22 > 2:38:21the break though and Leroy Fir pulled one back for the Canaries

2:38:22 > 2:38:21when he fired in a superb header. Papiss Cisse came off the bench to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21score what should have been Newcastle's third goal ` but it was

2:38:22 > 2:38:21mistakenly ruled offside. A slightly nervy end to the last ten minutes

2:38:22 > 2:38:21but Newcastle never looked in any real danger ` and another important

2:38:22 > 2:38:21victory for Alan Pardew's side. They looked a bit tired in the second

2:38:22 > 2:38:21half. We did have a really good second half. I felt we were in

2:38:22 > 2:38:21control of the game. I don't we were brilliant today. The most important

2:38:22 > 2:38:21thing in the dressing room today was three points. Well, Newcastle and

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Hartlepool were our only winners this week. And the only teams to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21finish with all 11 men on the field! Our four other major teams each

2:38:22 > 2:38:21picked up a red card ` ludicrously so, in Sunderland's case! I've yet

2:38:22 > 2:38:21to meet anyone who thinks this was a sending off ` apart from referee

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Kevin Friend, of course! He took four seconds to blow his whistle `

2:38:22 > 2:38:21which is a LONG time in football! Sunderland have said they intend to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21appeal ` they have to make it official by one o'clock tomorrow

2:38:22 > 2:38:21lunchtime. It's the third red card of Gus Poyet's reign, and it hasn't

2:38:22 > 2:38:21yet been rescinded, as he'd hoped it would be. And if it WAS dangerous

2:38:22 > 2:38:21play ` surely this was as well, from Stoke goalkeeper Asmir Begovic? Not

2:38:22 > 2:38:21even a yellow card, there. We're told Kevin Friend WON'T be

2:38:22 > 2:38:21refereeing in the Premier League next weekend. And while Begovic

2:38:22 > 2:38:21escaped ` there was no such luck for Middlesbrough keeper Jason Steele `

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Leeds' striker Dexter Blackstock looked to be heading AWAY from goal

2:38:22 > 2:38:21` but that's a three`match ban for Steele. And it's a FOUR match ban

2:38:22 > 2:38:21for York's Ryan Bowman ` foot up, at Southend ` sent off for the second

2:38:22 > 2:38:21time this season. Last on the list ` Carlisle defender Conor Townsend,

2:38:22 > 2:38:21on`loan from Hull ` this was his second yellow card in the space of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21three minutes ` never a good idea! And off he went. But the main

2:38:22 > 2:38:21talking point of the weekend, when it came to dodgy decisions, was this

2:38:22 > 2:38:21one ` Gus Poyet had, at least, calmed down a bit by the final

2:38:22 > 2:38:21whistle! Contact? No. Please explain it. It was stowed's first win in

2:38:22 > 2:38:21nine Premier League game. Nobody challenged Peter Crouch here. Very

2:38:22 > 2:38:21nice pass. A damaging defeat there Sunderland. Not a happy start for

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Aitor Karanka in his first match as Middlesbrough manager, Dawn? No, I'm

2:38:22 > 2:38:21afraid it was another of our teams, unable to cope with going down to

2:38:22 > 2:38:2110`men. So the new era ended in defeat for the Spaniard at Elland

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Road against old rivals Leeds who went on to win their fourth

2:38:22 > 2:38:21consecutive game with former Boro target Ross McCormack putting the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21home side ahead ` nine goals in seven matches for him. 10`man Boro

2:38:22 > 2:38:21did get back into it ` great work from Albert Adomah finished off by

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Muzzy Carayol. But Jason Pearce's header condemned them to a third

2:38:22 > 2:38:21straightaway defeat. Carlisle ` just three points above the drop zone,

2:38:22 > 2:38:21had one or two decent chances at Rotherham, Sean O'Hanlon's header

2:38:22 > 2:38:21tipped over by former Blues keeper Adam Collin. But the home side came

2:38:22 > 2:38:21on strong in the second half with on`loan keeper Ben Amos keeping the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Cumbrians in it before Lee Miller was denied by Collin. Now, can

2:38:22 > 2:38:21League Two play`off hopefuls, Hartlepool, hold on to teenage

2:38:22 > 2:38:21striker Luke James? This goal against Northampton was his 10th of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21the season. James Poole won a penalty to give Simon Walton the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21chance to double the home side's lead against the bottom club. Pools

2:38:22 > 2:38:21by the way have parted company with striker Steve Howard by mutual

2:38:22 > 2:38:21agreement. Another defeat for York City. After Kevan Hurst had put

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Southend ahead, Ryan Bowman equalised for the Minstermen. Both

2:38:22 > 2:38:21goal`scorers were later sent off. It was the dying moments of the game

2:38:22 > 2:38:21with a free kick. In actual fact, it was our free kick. The referee has

2:38:22 > 2:38:21given it to them. From a hard work, we get nothing. That is what the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21game can be at times. It can be cruel. You have to live with and get

2:38:22 > 2:38:21ready for the next one. Newcastle Falcons didn't score a single point

2:38:22 > 2:38:21in Saturday's defeat to the Premiership's second top club

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Northampton Saints. But despite failing to register on the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21scoreboard the Falcons defended well to restrict last years finallists to

2:38:22 > 2:38:216`0 at the break. Newcastle boss Dean Richards not happy with the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21refereeing ` the Falcons made a number of breaks ` but couldn't

2:38:22 > 2:38:21quite finish them off ` and two second half tries from the Saints

2:38:22 > 2:38:21put the game out of reach ` 18`0 final score. But in basketball,

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Newcastle Eagles are back on top of the table after a thrilling win over

2:38:22 > 2:38:21close rivals, Worcester Wolves. Paul Gause tied the game at 66`all with

2:38:22 > 2:38:21just four seconds on the clock. And the Eagles ` who, at one stage, had

2:38:22 > 2:38:21been 11 points behind ` raced away in overtime to win by 86 points to

2:38:22 > 2:38:2174. Elsewhere, Durham Wildcats beat Plymouth Raiders ` but lost to

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Sheffield Sharks who'll now be the Eagles' semifinal opponents in the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21BBL Cup. Time for the weather now. It has been called the last few

2:38:22 > 2:38:21days. It is the tail end of November. I think tonight's weather

2:38:22 > 2:38:21picture is an appropriate one to start with. Tommy has been out and

2:38:22 > 2:38:21about in the Lake District. Look at this camp, ` ` calm view. It will be

2:38:22 > 2:38:21slightly less cold may be over the next few days. That means overnight

2:38:22 > 2:38:21frost will be the exception rather than the rule. Be the odd spot of

2:38:22 > 2:38:21rain now and again. As we head into the evening and overnight, it is

2:38:22 > 2:38:21dry. Some missed and fork patches, and Ipswich of Frost. The frost will

2:38:22 > 2:38:21tend to come and go as the patchy cloud comes and goes. Most places

2:38:22 > 2:38:21will see a touch of Frost. Mostly dry start tomorrow but a frosty star

2:38:22 > 2:38:21in many. I think we will see sunny spells and develop has missed in fog

2:38:22 > 2:38:21patches clear. The sunshine start to disappear as we head into the

2:38:22 > 2:38:21afternoon. There could be a few spots of rain. This patchy rain is

2:38:22 > 2:38:21coming courtesy of that warm front tomorrow. The trailing cold front

2:38:22 > 2:38:21sinks southwards over the next few days. More persistent rain for a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21time on Friday. Then we're back into a colder north`westerly again. If

2:38:22 > 2:38:21you are out and about, what can you expect? In Cumbria, a lot of cloud.

2:38:22 > 2:38:2110 Celsius, 50 Fahrenheit. There should be enough clout to keep many

2:38:22 > 2:38:21places frost free. The risk of a touch of Frost now and again. Keep

2:38:22 > 2:38:21your November weather pictures coming in.

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Thanks, Paul. Finally a look at tonight's headlines. The couple

2:38:22 > 2:38:21suspected of holding three women against their will for decades in a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21London house have been named as Aravindan Bala`Krishnan and his wife

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Chanda. And it's emerged the police are called out hundreds of times a

2:38:22 > 2:38:21year to deal with people with dementia here in the north. You Joe

2:38:22 > 2:38:21Jackson is back with a late news at 10:25pm. We will see tomorrow.

2:38:22 > 2:38:22Goodbye.