
Innocent family arrested by armed police during dinner after hoax kidnapping call
Innocent family arrested by armed police during dinner after hoax kidnapping call
by Forward-Answer-4407

Innocent family arrested by armed police during dinner after hoax kidnapping call
Innocent family arrested by armed police during dinner after hoax kidnapping call
by Forward-Answer-4407
6 comments
Wtf, 15 hours it took them to sort this out? I hope someone in the police is being held accountable for that also
When people make malicious false reports eventually the system will try to correct and invariably this will work against the innocent.
How does it take the police 15 hours to work out there was no kidnapping victim in the house?
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Innocent family arrested by armed police during dinner after hoax kidnapping call
Danny Rigg
Published December 25, 2024 11:40am
Updated December 25, 2024 11:40am
Ricki Kendall has been jailed for 53 months (Picture: ncjMedia/PA)
A family was arrested at gunpoint during tea when armed police responded to a hoax kidnapping call.
The unnamed family were sat at home last December 30 when they noticed blue lights outside on Denton Road, Newcastle.
One of them ‘opened the door to find an officer pointing a firearm at him and telling him to get down’, Omar Ahmad, prosecuting, told the court.
Police arrested four people in the presence two young children, one of whom – an 11-year-old boy – burst into tears.
They were searching for balaclava-clad kidnappers armed with a machete who Ricki Kendall, aka Curry, had reported to have seen dragging a man into the house.
But the whole thing was a sham. Mr Ahmad said: ‘It soon transpired the defendant had completely fabricated the report he had made to the police.
‘The police said 72 hours of police time were wasted and the total cost was £4,140.’
A general view of Newcastle Crown court, where the inquest into the death of Raoul Moat is being held.
Mr Kendall admitted both perverting the course of justice, and a charge of robbery committed while on bail (Picture: Hugh Macknight/PA)
Extensive CCTV inquiries churned up no footage to back up Kendall’s tale.
Officers found no weapons in the house, and no one else reported the incident, despite Kendall doubling down with a description in his statement to police.
But the damage was already done. Family members spent 15 hours in custody, and news of the raid was plastered over social media and the news.
In a victim impact statement, one family member said: ‘Ever since this, I’ve not been the same in myself.
‘Seeing the incident in the paper and on social media has impacted on me. I saw comments like get them off the streets and other racial slurs.
‘All my family were doing was having tea. I’m frustrated and upset someone would do this.’
Another said: ‘I’ve never been in a police station before, let alone arrested. I was taken away from my family for something I’ve not done.
‘My 11-year-old brother witnessed it and was crying and distressed. I don’t know why someone reported I kidnapped someone. I want to know why someone would do this to us.’
A third said: ‘Every time I hear sirens I get flashbacks. I don’t know why anyone would do this
‘The furniture in my home was damaged by the police.’
Mr Kendall, 30, of Valley View, Lemington, Newcastle, admitted a charge of perverting the course of justice.
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He also pleaded guilty to robbery after stealing £110 of a taxi driver’s takings at knife-point while on bail for the perverting justice offence.
Mr Kendall, who has 39 previous convictions, was jailed for a total of 53 months for the two offences.
> In his sentencing remarks, Judge Andrew Stubbs KC said: ‘You were in a mental health crisis. You were making calls to the emergency services and they weren’t doing what you wanted them to do so you decided to make up a really serious allegation, saying someone had been kidnapped or assaulted and taken into a house.
So, the news is written at the start giving no idea if he was the prankster. Then later said, he called and pranked himself. So is he the prankster or not?
You can always step back from an emergency/incident
And, before anyone suggests it, no, they can’t sue the police. They might be able to sue the person who made the call, but that’s pointless if they have no money.
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