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Woman hurt in crash at Stainfield

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Woman hurt in crash at Stainfield This is Lincolnshire -- A woman was cut from a Jaguar car in Short Ferry Road, Stainfield, and taken by ambulance to hospital. The crash happened just after 2.30pm today and fire crews from Lincoln North and South stations attended. Reported by This is 2 hours ago.

Fatal bus crash changes 'not enough'

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BBC Local News: Hereford and Worcester -- Changes to road safety laws after the M40 crash did not go far enough, victims' families say Reported by BBC Local News 1 week ago.

How I survived North Sea helicopter crash that killed four - Hull man Paul Sharp

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How I survived North Sea helicopter crash that killed four - Hull man Paul Sharp This is Hull and East Riding --

A MAN has told how he escaped death when a helicopter he was in plunged into the sea, killing four people. Paul Sharp, 48, of Holderness Road, east Hull, was one of the survivors when the Super Puma L2 hurtled uncontrollably into the North Sea.

Mr Sharp, an offshore worker, was one of 18 on the helicopter, which was returning to Aberdeen from the Borgsten Dolphin platform.

The aircraft was making a stop at Sumburgh Airport to refuel, which is at the tip of the Shetland Islands.

"As we approached Sumburgh the pilot said there was ten minutes to landing," said Mr Sharp.

"I tightened my lap strap and sat up. But that ten minutes became 15 and then 20 and we were all looking at each other asking, 'what's the craic?'

"All of a sudden we broke cloud level and there was a whooshing noise.

"Then there was a clicking, like a bone was breaking.

"The helicopter turned on its side and just fell out of the sky."

The helicopter plunged 600ft into the water, 2.4 nautical miles from the airport.

"It landed on its side and buckled and started to turn over," said Mr Sharp. "It instantly started to take on water.

"It all happened so quickly, there were about four seconds from the click to it hitting the sea. You didn't have time to think.

"There was a lot of panic. I knew the protocol and I knew to stay in my seat until it had fully inverted, but a lot of people had taken their belts off and they were floating around.

"The helicopter was full of water and I thought about dying. I felt calm. I can remember thinking, 'at least I have life insurance'."

With the helicopter full of water, and everyone trapped under it, Mr Sharp knew if he did not get out soon he would die.

His survival instincts kicked in.

He said: "I had hold of the tab on the window, I pulled but it came to bits. I was pushing the window out with my elbow but it wouldn't move.

"I punched it two or three times and it popped out. I undid my belt and was straight out."

Thanks to Mr Sharp's calm thinking, another four people were able to escape from that window.

"When I broke to the surface to take a breath, a massive swell hit and a load of aviation fluid went into my mouth," he said.

"I could see someone floating out and I grabbed them, but they were obviously dead. I pulled my life jacket, but it failed to inflate. I started to manually inflate it and it went up.

"There were four or five of us in the water at that time and we were drifting away from the helicopter.

"We tried to get together and buddy up, but one guy was seriously injured and the swell broke us up."

Mr Sharp said his immersion suit, which is supposed to keep him dry, warm and afloat, began to fill with water.

"It shouldn't have," he said. "But I must have ripped it on a rota blade when I came out of the helicopter."

Mr Sharp continued to put on his emergency equipment, including balaclava and gloves.

But the strobe light, torch and personal location beacon on his life jacket were not working.

He was alone and drifting further from the wreckage.

"I thought 'I'll turn round once more to see how far away I am'.

"I looked around and I was miles away."

Poor visibility from misty weather conditions, coupled with strong tides and the location of the helicopter near cliffs, made the rescue operation hazardous and Mr Sharp had already been in the water 40 minutes.

"As I turned round a swell came up and as it did I saw the rescue helicopter. It was winching someone up and I remember hoping they would see me next. Thankfully, they did, and came over to get me," he said.

The men winched from the sea were taken to a triage unit at Sumburgh airport and warmed up before being transferred to hospital.

Mr Sharp said: "I remember calling my wife and saying, 'I've been in a bit of an accident'. She said, 'what have you done to the car?'

"I told her the helicopter had crashed. She turned on Sky News and it was all over there. She was devastated."

Despite plunging 600ft from the sky, Mr Sharp's only external injuries from the accident, on August 23, were a hematoma stretching from his knee to his hip from the impact and scrapes and bruising on his knuckles, where he punched the window through.

He was back with wife Jean and daughter Amelia, ten, at their home two days after the crash.

"I came home and hugged them. There were tears," said Mr Sharp.

"I said, 'I'm OK, I'm alive'.

"Every day I think, 'I'm lucky to be alive', and that's why I don't take anything for granted now.

"Everything can be fixed. There's no rush.

"Trivial things that used to bother me don't anymore. I see life in a different way."

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*• Emergency services updates and breaking news* Reported by This is 6 days ago.

Investigators seek jet crash clues

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Russian investigators are combing through the charred fragments of a Boeing 737 jetliner as they try to determine what caused it to crash, killing all 50 people on board. Reported by Belfast Telegraph 6 days ago.

Man dies and two injured in crash

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A man dies and two others are seriously injured in a crash involving two cars in Bonnybridge on Sunday afternoon. Reported by BBC News 6 days ago.

Three dogs were killed and a woman was left with a broken leg after a crash on the M40

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Three dogs were killed and a woman was left with a broken leg after a crash on the M40 Dogs escaped onto the motorway after the caravan, which had broken down on the hard shoulder on the M40 northbound near Banbury in Oxfordshire, was involved in a crash with a lorry at 5.40am today. Reported by MailOnline 16 hours ago.

How can banking still be a source of scandal so long after the crash? | Andrew Rawnsley

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There are alarming signs that people are behaving as if there were nothing really to learn from the bubble years

Sex, drugs, money, video, religion and politics. That's the beauty of this scandal. The tale of the Reverend Paul Flowers, alleged "crystal Methodist", and the Co-operative bank is a gift that gives to everyone. If you are a television current affairs producer, you can set items about the affair to the soundtrack of Breaking Bad. If you are the Tories, it is an opportunity to try to dirty up the Labour party by association with the movement that holds its overdraft, gives it donations and sponsors its MPs – though possibly not for much longer. If you are of some leftwing flavours, it provides a reason to denounce all banking, even that which calls itself "ethical", as an inherently cronyistic and corrupted business.

If you occupy a certain kind of bully pulpit of the moralising right, you can try to build out of this one lurid saga a more general theory about the debauchery of the liberal-left. If you can see the tragedy in this sorry business, you can reflect mournfully on the withering of the mutual tradition that grew out of the self-help ethic of the Victorian working class. If your taste is for painful paradoxes, you can dwell on the irony that the Co-op has now fallen into the hands of hedge-funds. American hedge-funds to boot. Whatever you want to say, you can say it with Mr Flowers.

David Cameron wants it to say something about his opponents. The prime minister describes the fallen reverend as the "man who has broken a bank" and "trooped in and out of Downing Street under Labour". We can all see what he is trying to do here. When it comes to this sort of stuff, Mr Cameron does not operate at a very subtle level. He draws with a crayon. The Tories are gleeful that "Labour's bank" is the site of a scandal.

They are rather too obvious in their hope that the inquiry ordered by the prime minister will make Labour squirm and inflict collateral damage on the issue of financial competence on the Eds Balls and Miliband. If the boot was on the other foot – if we were talking about a scandal at a bank closely associated with the Tories – Labour would likely be doing something similar. But there are some perils here for the Tories too. Mr Flowers was approved as the bank's chairman in the final weeks of the last government and his Labour links appear to have helped him into a role to which he was so spectacularly unsuited. Even before his arrest over the drug allegations, he was not a fit person to be entrusted with a piggy bank, never mind a high street one. That doesn't look great for Labour, but then it doesn't look so wonderful for the current government that he then stayed in post until the summer of this year.

Mark Hoban, then Treasury minister, reportedly had 30 meetings or telephone conversations with executives at the bank during its abortive attempt to purchase Lloyds branches just before a huge hole was discovered in its balance sheet. The Financial Times has revealed that George Osborne trekked to Brussels to try to persuade other finance ministers to waive capital requirement rules to help the Co-op bid for the Lloyds network. In the end, I suspect all the political name-calling and blame-gaming will cancel itself out.

It is the implications for the future financing of Labour that potentially pose the most serious threat to the party. The Co-op Group, of which the bank is a part, has been a vital lifeline for Labour. It has made substantial donations, sponsors 32 MPs and has kept the party's head above water with £18m in loans on generous terms. As we report today, the bank's new management plans to dramatically reduce, possibly terminate altogether, the support that it gives to Labour.

As my colleague Daniel Boffey also reveals, two former advisers to David Cameron are working with the bank's new management, which will deepen the apprehension in Labour's ranks. This threat that Labour will lose the support of the bank comes at a time when some of the union bosses are on a donations strike over Ed Miliband's attempt to reform the union-Labour link.

For the rest of us, the most important question is why, five years on from the Great Crash, banking is still a source of such scandal. Never again. That is what they all said, politicians of every stripe, when the bubble burst in 2008. Yet here we go again.

Ministers will say that the reverend was approved as the chairman of the bank under the old system run by the now defunct Financial Services Authority. They will go on to contend that the new regulators apply more rigorous vetting. Clearly it is not a tremendous idea to have a bank chaired by someone as astonishingly ill-qualified and with such interesting predilections as Mr Flowers, but that alone does not explain what went wrong at the Co-op. I'd be cautious about putting all my confidence in superior qualification tests. They would have been passed by the authors of some of the most spectacular banking failures of 2008. Fred Goodwin was an accountant and no one ever accused the former chief executive of RBS of consuming mind-alterating substances – unless you count over-inhaling his own ego. He nevertheless presided over the ruination of the Royal Bank of Scotland.

That was a much more serious event by several orders of magnitude than the troubles at the Co-op; RBS was the greatest corporate bankruptcy in British history. At least the Co-op case is not going to require the taxpayer to stump up hundreds of billions of pounds to save the economy from bankers' follies, as was the case then.

I almost feel sorry for Mr Flowers, arrested and humiliated, when I compare his fate with that of those responsible for much graver and more dangerous banking failures.

The men who led some of our biggest banks to ruin and took Britain to the edge of a financial apocalypse leapt clear of the wreckage with the fat proceeds of salaries and bonuses accumulated during the boom years and their vast pension pots. Regulators have dished out fines for the Libor fixing scandal, but no one has yet been put in a dock. No one has even been much shamed for the roles they played in the Great Crash. A couple of the bankers were subsequently stripped of their knighthoods and that was it.

There is an increasing number of alarming signs that people are behaving as if there were nothing really to learn from the bubble years and nothing much to remedy in the banking system. Personal indebtedness in Britain has risen back to pre-crisis levels. Mortgage lenders are once again offering 95% loans, encouraged by ministers eager for the tax revenues from stamp duty and hoping to create a deceptive feelgood factor generated by a boomlet in property prices. Once again, Vince Cable is a rather lonely prophet worrying where this will lead, but this time a voice of warning somewhat muffled by collective responsibility. Once again, other politicians shrug off his cautions and dismiss him as Dr Doom.

The Bank of England's base rate remains at the historically unprecedented low level of 0.5% and has been there for so long now that people have started to treat the abnormal as the normal. At some point, interest rates will start to rise and with it the mortgage payments of millions of people. When that happens, a lot of voters are going to be in for a nasty shock. The chancellor's essential gamble is that the governor will hold down the base rate until May 2015 is safely behind him and David Cameron.

City bonuses are still structured in a way that rewards and incentivises short-term risk-taking. The law lacks serious penalties for reckless or fraudulent trading. Five years on from the Great Crash and the legislation to reform financial services has still not got on to the statute book. It is only this week that the banking bill will reach the report stage in the House of Lords. That could be the site of a lively battle between ministers and those who find the legislation highly inadequate because it fails to implement or dilutes some of the key reforms proposed by the government's own banking commission.

Among several crucial recommendations that the government doesn't want to follow, ministers have resisted a licensing regime that would subject senior bankers to an annual competence and integrity test, though that would clearly have been very useful in the Flowers case. Another vital issue is the separation of the retail and investment, high street and casino arms of banks. The commission wanted this fence to be "electrified" by giving regulators the power to intervene if they found that a bank was "gaming the system". Members of the commission, including the archbishop of Canterbury, are well-represented in the Upper House. This week's Lords debate will be one of the last chances to put some sharper teeth into banking regulation.

By turns entertaining and horrifying, the Flowers affair has shown that Britain is great at laying on a scandal. What we don't do so well is prevent them.

• Comments will be turned on later this morning Reported by guardian.co.uk 12 hours ago.

Willie Nelson's Bandmates Injured In Bus Crash

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Members of country legend Willie Nelson's band have been injured in a crash.A tour bus transporting the musicians through Texas spun out of control... Reported by ContactMusic 4 hours ago.

Person airlifted to hospital and three others injured following crash in Kilby Bridge

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Person airlifted to hospital and three others injured following crash in Kilby Bridge This is Leicestershire -- One person has been airlifted to hospital and three others injured following a crash in Kilby Bridge, near Wigston. Fire crews were called to the incident on the A5199 at 1.30pm yesterday, where they found the car rolled over. The police, ambulance and air ambulance were also in attendance. One of the casualties was airlifted to Walsgrave Hospital, in Coventry. Another patient was taken to Leicester Royal Infirmary by ambulance. The other two casualties were treated at the roadside butlater went to hospital. No further information about the condition of the patients has yet been released. Reported by This is 3 hours ago.

Brooklyn court clears driver for causing crash after bikini top untied by passenger

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Brooklyn court clears driver for causing crash after bikini top untied by passenger A Brooklyn appeals court has cleared a female driver over a fatal crash in 2008, after she caused a crash by briefly taking her hands off the steering wheel after a backseat passenger untied her bikini top.

Descrier - independent news and culture Reported by The Descrier 1 day ago.

UK ad spend set to hit pre-crash high

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WPP buying arm forecasts revenues to hit nearly £14bn in 2013, with digital accounting for 44% of the market as print share falls

Total UK advertising spend is forecast to reach a new high of nearly £14bn in 2013, topping pre-financial crash levels for the first time in six years.

The UK ad market will be worth £13.9bn this year, with digital advertising accounting for 44.2%, or £6.2bn, according to GroupM, WPP's media buying arm.

Group M has more than doubled its UK ad spend growth projection for 2013, from 3.3% six months ago to 7%; and also upped it growth forecast for next year, from 3.5% to 6%, when the total is expected to hit £14.8bn.

Digital will make up almost 50% of total UK ad spend in 2014, Group M is forecasting, reaching £7bn.

Total UK ad spend hit a previous high of £13.1bn in 2007 before dipping to £11.3bn in 2009 following the credit crunch and ensuing recession.

Adam Smith, GroupM future director, described the recovery of the UK advertising market since then as "spectacular, but not a phenomenon".

"UK annual GDP is likely to have risen 9% in cash terms since 2008, and annual advertising the same. The question is whether advertisers sustain their optimism that UK households are feeling richer, and might actually get richer, between now and the election expected in spring 2015," Smith said, as GroupM released its latest This Year, Next Year report on Monday.

"UK paid search has doubled in size since 2008 in cash terms and as a share of all UK marketing investment. Smartphones, tablets and e-commerce sustain this momentum. We think mobile (including tablets) will furnish 70% of paid search investment growth this year and all of it next year."

Overall UK advertising may have recovered to better than pre-crash levels, but the market has been transformed by the dramatic changes in the media landscape, with digital worth more than double 2007's £2.7bn – 21% of that year's total.

Over the same period, all forms of print media – national and regional newspapers, consumer and B2B magazines – have suffered significant declines in total ad revenue and market share, according to GroupM. Radio, outdoor and cinema advertising is also down, in absolute and market share terms, but by less.

The TV sector has increased its ad revenue since 2007 and kept its market share about the same.

Regional paper advertising has taken the biggest dive in revenue terms, from £2.3bn (17.8% of total UK advertising) in 2007 to a forecast of £984m (7.1%) this year – a decline of nearly 60% and below £1bn for the first time in recent memory.

B2B magazine advertising revenue has suffered the most proportionally, down nearly 70% over six years, from £823m to £239m. The B2B sector's share of the total UK market has fallen from 6.3% to 1.7%.

National newspaper advertising revenue is down from £1.6bn (12.5% market share) in 2007 to £1.1bn (8%); consumer magazines from £672m (5.1%) to £437m (3.1%).

Group M is forecasting UK radio advertising revenues of £362m this year (2.6%), compared to £422m in 2007 (3.2%); outdoor at £777m (5.6%) against £781m six years ago (6%), and cinema at £156m (1.1%) compared to £176m (1.3%).

Total UK TV ad spend was £3.5bn in 2007 and the sector had a 26.7% market share. This year it is forecast to be £3.7bn (26.6%).

• To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email media@theguardian.com or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".

• To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook. Reported by guardian.co.uk 1 day ago.

Four injured in one-vehicle crash

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BBC Local News: Edinburgh and East Scotland -- Four people are injured in a serious crash involving one vehicle on the A198 Tyninghame to Whitekirk road in East Lothian. Reported by BBC Local News 16 hours ago.

Man hurt in three-car M54 crash

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A man was injured in a three-car crash on the eastbound carriageway of the M54 this morning. Reported by Express and Star 13 hours ago.

Driver bailed over Goldenhill car crash

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Driver bailed over Goldenhill car crash This is Staffordshire --

POLICE have bailed a driver over a crash which saw a car plough into a lamppost and telegraph pole.

The 20-year-old, who has not been named, was arrested on suspicion of dangerous driving following the crash in Kidsgrove Road, Goldenhill, last week.

The impact of the collision uprooted the telegraph pole and bent the lamppost.

It prompted calls from residents for speed cameras.

The driver must report back to police in January. Reported by This is 14 hours ago.

Dad of cycle crash coma victim Ryan Smith speaks of 'staggering' moment son uttered first words since accident

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Dad of cycle crash coma victim Ryan Smith speaks of 'staggering' moment son uttered first words since accident This is Grimsby -- The dad of a Lincolnshire teenager who was left in a coma after being knocked off his bike has spoken of the 'remarkable' moment his son said his first words since the accident. Ryan Smith, 16, from Chapel St Leonards, was involved in a crash with a van whilst cycling to work near the seaside village in August. He was in a coma for several weeks and has been in hospital ever since. But, on November 22, he managed to say 'hello', 'mum' and 'dad' from his hospital bed. "It was staggering," said Mark Smith. "I asked him to say hello and he did it. It was remarkable. "He is awe inspiring. Every down day we have he brightens it up and sends us home with smiles on our faces. "He has got a long way to go yet but he is making more headway than anyone expected." Ryan was yesterday moved to The Children's Trust unit in Tadworth, Surrey, where he continues to receive specialist help and support on his road to recovery. Reported by This is 8 hours ago.

Breaking News: Remarkable four stage operation to fly crash victim Stuart Kyffin from Thailand to UK

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Breaking News: Remarkable four stage operation to fly crash victim Stuart Kyffin from Thailand to UK This is Scunthorpe -- A North Lincolnshire based company have spoken about the four stage operation to transport crash victim Stuart Kyffin back to the UK. The ex-SAS officer was flown back to the UK by Amvale Medical Transport Limited just days after the £100,000 fundraising target was reached to fund his travel back to the UK. Stu was involved in a serious motorbike accident in Thailand on October 4 and suffered severe head and brain trauma and was in a coma. He was flown from Thailand to India, then on to Turkey before arriving at Doncaster airport. He was then transferred to Scunthorpe General Hospital. An anonymous £50,000 donation meant the £100,000 mark needed to help bring Stuart back and receive treatment had been passed. A spokesman for Amvale said: "On the evening of Sunday, November 24, Stuart and our medical team, under the charge of Dr Moe Thant from The Northern Lincolnshire and Goole Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, touched down at Doncaster Airport. "This long journey had seen them fly from Koh Samui in Thailand via Delhi in India, Tehran in Iran, and Trabzon in Turkey before their final leg to Doncaster. Stuart was then transferred by our own Ambulance to Scunthorpe General Hospital in North Lincolnshire." The company was made aware of Stuart's case by one of its employees. The spokesman added: "Our management team spoke to Stuart's family and asked if we could assist in any way we could. "On discussing the situation further, Amvale approached this in a military manner by producing a situation report and plan which was agreed at all times by Stuart's next of kin and family. "This plan involved a large degree of initial information gathering in respect of Stuart's medical condition and this proved to be valuable and time well spent to ensure that the family's agreed plan would support Stuart's long journey back to the United Kingdom." Amvale said it was a credit to the family and supporters who helped rally round to bring Stuart home. "We are pleased to have been part of the many organisations and individual people who have united in supporting this wonderful cause to repatriate Stuart with his family and friends in the United Kingdom," the spokesman added. "We would like to say a personal thank you to our own team who have supported Stuart's repatriation, their time and efforts are a reflection of their commitment and dedication to helping others." Brain-damaged ex-SAS officer Stuart Kyffin flown to Scunthorpe General after Thailand bike crash Reported by This is 10 hours ago.

Three teenagers die in East Lothian car crash

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Fourth person being treated in hospital after vehicle hits wall in Tyninghame on Monday night

Three teenagers have died after the car they were in crashed into a wall. An 18-year-old woman and two boys, aged 15 and 16, died of their injuries after the incident on a minor road in Tyninghame, East Lothian.

A fourth person, a 16-year-old boy, is being treated at Edinburgh's Royal Infirmary. The crash happened on an unclassified road at about 8.25pm on Monday.

Police Scotland said the four teenagers were travelling in a Peugeot 206. The three who lost their lives died at the scene of the crash. No other vehicles were involved.

Road policing officers investigating the incident asked anyone who could help with their inquiries to come forward.

A Police Scotland spokesman said: "Tragically, this incident has resulted in three young people losing their lives and we are currently trying to establish exactly what has happened.

"Any motorists who were on the road at the time and have information that can help with our investigation is asked to contact police immediately." Reported by guardian.co.uk 12 hours ago.

Sarah Teelow: Leading Australian waterskier dies following crash near Sydney

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Sarah Teelow, a leading Australian waterskier, has died following a crash during an endurance race on the Hawkesbury River north of Sydney on Sunday. Reported by Independent 10 hours ago.

Woman suffers chest injuries in two car crash in Barnstaple town centre

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Woman suffers chest injuries in two car crash in Barnstaple town centre This is North Devon -- A woman has suffered chest injuries following a two car crash in Barnstaple town centre this afternoon. Police said a purple Chrysler Voyager and a black Ford Ka, both registered to addresses in Barnstaple, collided in Bear Street shortly after 3pm. Officers said a woman suffered chest injuries in the crash, but could not confirm which vehicle she was travelling in. Fire crews were also called to the scene following reports of smoke coming from the engine of one of the vehicles. An ambulance also attended although police were unable to confirm if anyone had been taken to hospital. A nearby barrier was also damaged in the crash which has caused heavy traffic delays in the town centre. Reported by This is 6 hours ago.

Two taken to hospital after Three Bridges crash

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Two people were taken to hospital after a crash in Three Bridges this morning (Tuesday November 26).

 
 
 
  Reported by Crawley Observer 5 hours ago.
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