A former Commonwealth boxing champion assaulted a female ticket inspector when he was caught travelling on the wrong train, a court has heard.
Wadi Camacho, 35, had been travelling from Birmingham to London when he was caught sitting in a first class carriage on the wrong train in November 2019.
The boxer, from Walthamstow, north east London, who had a standard class ticket for a later train, was told by a ticket inspector to leave at the next stop in Milton Keynes but Camacho refused and staff at Euston station were soon alerted.
However when confronted by ticket inspector Olya Muzyka at Euston, Camacho, who held the Commonwealth cruiserweight title from 2018 to 2019, pushed the employee out of the way in an attempt to flee the scene.
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Uber ordered to reinstate six drivers fired by automated process
A default judgment handed down by Dutch court has ordered Uber to reinstate six drivers with compensation following unevidenced accusations of fraud and automated firing via algorithm
Share this item with your network: By Published: 15 Apr 2021 16:30
Ride-hailing firm Uber has been ordered by an Amsterdam court to reinstate five British drivers and one Dutch driver with compensation after finding that they were unlawfully dismissed for fraud by the app’s algorithm.
The drivers involved in the case – which was brought by the App Drivers & Couriers Union (ADCU) and its associated data trust Worker Info Exchange (WEI) – argued that they had been wrongly accused of fraudulent activity because of mistaken information, which led to them being fired by Uber’s algorithm.
Henok Yefru/Robert Bagot Two men will face trial this summer for allegedly organising a rave in Deptford, in breach of coronavirus restrictions. Robert Bagot and Henok Yefru, both 32, are accused of helping to organise the event on Childers Street on November 22 last year. Both Bagot, of Ilford, and Yefru, of Leyton, accept being present, but deny organising the gathering. They both denied a single count of holding or being involved in holding a rave-type gathering in England of more than 30 people indoors – an offence with a maximum fine of £10,000. City of London Magistrates’ Court heard that one of the issues in the case will be whether lending sound equipment to the rave would meet the definition of being organisers of the event.
Cases will be heard this summer at Westminster Magistrates Court
- Credit: PA WIRE
Two men will face trial this summer for allegedly organising a rave in November in breach of coronavirus restrictions.
Robert Bagot, 32, is accused of helping to organise the event on Childers Street in Deptford, south London, on November 22 last year.
Both Bagot, of Audrey Road, Ilford, and co-defendant Henok Yefru, of Belgrave Road, Leyton, accept being present but deny organising the gathering.
They both denied a single count of holding or being involved in holding a rave-type gathering in England of more than 30 people indoors – an offence with a maximum fine of £10,000.