By Press Association 2021
Charlotte Charles (centre) and Tim Dunn (right), the parents of Harry Dunn, with Family advisor Radd Seiger (left), arrive at Terminal 2 of Heathrow Airport
The parents of teenage motorcyclist Harry Dunn are set to fly to the United States to give evidence under oath as part of a damages claim against their son’s alleged killer.
Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn will fly to Washington DC on Tuesday ahead of the “deposition” process which is due to begin later this week.
Mr Dunn’s parents will face lawyers acting on behalf of suspect Anne Sacoolas, who left the UK after diplomatic immunity was asserted on her behalf following the 19-year-old’s death in August 2019.
By Press Association 2021
Harry Dunn death
The parents of teenage motorcyclist Harry Dunn are set to fly to the United States to give evidence under oath as part of a damages claim against their son’s alleged killer.
Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn will fly to Washington DC on Tuesday ahead of the “deposition” process which is due to begin later this week.
Mr Dunn’s parents will face lawyers acting on behalf of suspect Anne Sacoolas, who left the UK after diplomatic immunity was asserted on her behalf following the 19-year-old’s death in August 2019.
Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn are due to fly to Washington DC on Tuesday (Jacob King/PA)
By Press Association 2021
Charlotte Charles (centre) and Tim Dunn (right), the parents of Harry Dunn, with Family advisor Radd Seiger (left), arrive at Terminal 2 of Heathrow Airport
The parents of teenage motorcyclist Harry Dunn are set to fly to the United States to give evidence under oath as part of a damages claim against their son’s alleged killer.
Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn will fly to Washington DC on Tuesday ahead of the “deposition” process which is due to begin later this week.
Mr Dunn’s parents will face lawyers acting on behalf of suspect Anne Sacoolas, who left the UK after diplomatic immunity was asserted on her behalf following the 19-year-old’s death in August 2019.
RPT-SPECIAL REPORT-How Beijing humbled Britain s mighty HSBC Reuters 17 hrs ago
(Repeats story first published on Monday.)
By Sumeet Chatterjee and Engen Tham
HONG KONG/SHANGHAI, June 28 (Reuters) - On a rainy day last November, China Baowu Steel Group, the world s largest steel maker, gathered its finance department for a training session on the outskirts of Shanghai. One highlight was a presentation featuring a sensitive slide: a black list of 60 lenders that the state-owned steel giant had declared off-limits.
Virtually all the lenders branded by China Baowu as too high risk to engage with were troubled Chinese banks, large and small. But at the very end of the list, a copy of which was reviewed by Reuters, there was a single foreign lender, one of the largest banks in the world: HSBC Holdings PLC.
By Press Association 2021
Charlotte Charles (centre) and Tim Dunn (right), the parents of Harry Dunn, with Family advisor Radd Seiger (left), arrive at Terminal 2 of Heathrow Airport
The parents of teenage motorcyclist Harry Dunn are set to fly to the United States to give evidence under oath as part of a damages claim against their son’s alleged killer.
Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn will fly to Washington DC on Tuesday ahead of the “deposition” process which is due to begin later this week.
Mr Dunn’s parents will face lawyers acting on behalf of suspect Anne Sacoolas, who left the UK after diplomatic immunity was asserted on her behalf following the 19-year-old’s death in August 2019.