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Police officer raped two women and abused a third
Police officer raped two women and abused a third
He 'carried out deliberate and repeated acts of abuse against women'.
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A former police officer has been sentenced to 10 years in prison after being found guilty of violent and non-recent sexual offences against women. Cameron Ross, 39, was sentenced on Thursday, 2 July, for the offences that took place in Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis in 2012 and 2014 and Inverness between 2019 and 2022.
He had denied charges, but had been found guilty at the High Court in Edinburgh on Monday, May 25, where he was also sentenced. During the trial, the court heard how Ross raped the first woman after they met at a party on Lewis between August and October 2012. A second woman told the court of how Ross sat on her and restrained her before raping her in June 2014. He went on to subject a third woman to a course of abusive behaviour between October 2019 and June 2022 in Inverness, the court heard. Alongside being found guilty of rape and domestic abuse, the former policeman was also found guilty of attempting to pervert the course of justice and threatening or abusive behaviour, the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service said.
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Ross, who resigned from Police Scotland in June 2026, has been placed on the sex offenders register indefinitely.
Faye Cook, Procurator Fiscal for High Court Sexual Offences at the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS), said: “Cameron Ross carried out deliberate and repeated acts of abuse against women over the course of a decade. This was sustained offending, which caused significant harm. As a police officer, he was in a position of trust. Instead of upholding the law, he chose to break it in a serious and persistent way. I would urge anyone affected by similar offending to come forward and report it. The Crown is committed to prosecuting those responsible for sexual and domestic abuse, regardless of who they are.”
Chief Superintendent Helen Harrison, Head of Professional Standards, said: "Ross was a serving officer at the time of these offences and when the report was received in June 2022, we immediately suspended him. He has since resigned from the service. If he had remained, we would have progressed gross misconduct proceedings and he would have been dismissed as his actions and behaviour will not be tolerated in Police Scotland.
"I want to thank those who came forward and recognise how difficult that can be when the perpetrator is a police officer.
"Police Scotland continues to work with survivors’ groups to improve our response to violence against women and girls to embed an approach which places survivors at the heart of our investigation with a trauma-informed approach and we remain committed to further improvement.
"Equally, over a period of years, and advanced by Lady Elish Angiolini's review in 2020, there has been a Scotland wide focus on police ethics, conduct and scrutiny."
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The superintendent also said police "continue to fully engage with those developments to strengthen our safeguarding of policing's integrity and we're working to embed new legislation to continue that improvement".
"We fully accept the onus is on policing to build confidence with members of the public, victims and witnesses to ensure they can report wrongdoing by police officers and staff, and can be confident that robust action will be taken.
“Police Scotland is committed to reviewing its processes, policies, and procedures, which continue to evolve and are shaped by feedback. The ability to handle police misconduct matters in a more robust, timely and transparent way will now also be greatly strengthened by the Police (Ethics, Conduct and Scrutiny) (Scotland) Act 2025,” she said.
Met Office issues heatwave forecast as 9 areas facing 30C heat on Sunday
Met Office issues heatwave forecast as 9 areas facing 30C heat on Sunday - full list
Temperatures are due to rise again this weekend.
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The Met Office has revealed which areas could see temperatures of 30C this weekend as it gives its verdict on another possible heatwave. Summery conditions are due to resume on Sunday as a high-pressure weather system moves in from the Azores.
This is forecast to bring rising temperatures, with many areas in the high 20s, and South-east England potentially reaching 30C. Tony Wisson, Met Office deputy chief forecaster, said: "Toward the weekend, high pressure will continue to build in across most of the UK as it extends from the Azores.
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"This will lead to more settled, warm or very warm conditions for many, especially across England and Wales, though some rain may still affect the far north.
"The forecast for this weekend suggests that temperatures could approach high 20s°C across parts of England, perhaps 30°C in parts of the southeast, with values of mid to high 20s°C in Wales.
"Although a return to heatwave conditions is looking increasingly likely for some areas, the likelihood of such extreme high temperatures or high levels of humidity as last week is currently low."
The Met Office forecast for Saturday to Monday adds: "Scotland, Northern Ireland and the northwest of England will often be rather cloudy and breezy with outbreaks of rain. Mostly dry further south with some sunshine. Turning hot in places."
Met Office names 9 areas facing 30C heat
The Met Office said temperatures could reach 30C in areas of South-east England, which includes the counties:
- Berkshire
- Buckinghamshire
- East Sussex
- Hampshire
- Isle of Wight
- Kent
- Oxfordshire
- Surrey
- West Sussex
NYTimes: DHS Has Arrested 10,000 Illegals This Week
NYTimes: DHS Has Arrested 10,000 Illegals This Week

The Department of Homeland Security has doubled the arrest rate of illegal migrants to 2,000 per day, according to the New York Times.
The paper reported Wednesday night federal immigration officials have detained more than 10,000 people since Friday.
The push was prompted by the White House and aimed at identified targets, including some of the migrants who have already been ordered home by judges, the paper said, adding:
ICE officials were told that the White House wanted an increase in arrests, according to three officials with knowledge of the conversations. One of the officials said that it was unclear how long the pace could continue, but that ICE officials had been told that 2,000 arrests a day was the new standard for enforcement.
[…]
In recent days, ICE officers have launched an intense push to ramp up arrests. Arrests topped out on Saturday when authorities detained over 2,400 people, according to documents obtained by The Times. The detention population inside ICE facilities has jumped nearly 4,000, to more than 63,000 in the agency’s custody as of Tuesday, according to internal documents.
So far, agency chief Markwayne Mullin has said little or nothing about the arrest campaign. But last week, Mullin told Breitbart News:
Within the next six weeks we’ll probably pass what we deported in all of ’25 …I think we’ll definitely do it within two months but should be probably six weeks at the current rate.
The agency can arrest and deport many migrants because it has far more agents, jail cells, and lawyers.
It has also won many court battles, established many bureaucratic speed-ups, and adopted many time-saving regulatory reforms.
If maintained, the campaign would likely push the annual deportations above one million, partly because many additional migrants will follow their arrested relatives home.
The exit rate might climb further if the nation’s population of at least 14 million illegal migrants, if other agencies can block their bank accounts, work permits, driving licenses, and housing.
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The DHS pressure will likely force employers to recruit more Americans — and pay them higher wages — before the November election. Nationwide, rents have been drifting down as federal agencies push more migrants home.
But the DHS push cannot continue for long, the New York Times suggested:
Top ICE officials were told to make sure that as many officers as possible were working seven days a week, and to put 80 percent of their officers on arrest operations, according to two U.S. officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal conversations. Top supervisors were expected to be working closely on the operations as well.
The push helps to explain media reports about field arrests in several states, including Texas and Florida, in Milwaukee and greater Wisconsin. For example, Breitbart News reported on Wednesday:
Federal agents raided a Birmingham, Alabama, manufacturing plant, detaining more than 30 people as part of an ongoing criminal investigation.
The raid took place on Tuesday at the Scholar Craft facility in Birmingham. According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Homeland Security agents, along with state and local police, executed federal search warrants at the plant.
Officials say the operation is part of a broader investigation into identity fraud and unlawful employment practices, specifically targeting the use of fake IDs and stolen documents to secure jobs.
The campaign is likely to avoid the farm sector, as well as the many restaurants and Indian-run hotels that are critical for the nation’s non-residential real-estate sector.
There is also little sign of a federal crackdown on the Indian-dominated white-collar sector, where many visa programs enable the half-hidden rampant fraud, discrimination, and kickbacks that have sidelined a huge number of American college grads.
Social media sites are also showing new videos of low-drama street arrests of tradesmen and blue-collar workers;