Anti-terrorism police arrested 13 men suspected of planning terror acts in raids across England yesterday. She had left school some months before and threw herself into her new job, her employer said.She added: “I think it is a sad loss of a young life.. I offered her a home at my house – that’s how bad it got.Mrs Taylor started working at the hairdressing salon when she was a teenager. She didn’t come back and I think that was partly to do with family influence. I don’t think he liked her working.”She was not happy with her family.
Tragically this will no longer happen.”The friend of Mrs Taylor said she had become very close to the young hairdresser until her father moved back into the family home four years ago. She said until that point, Mrs Taylor had lived with her mother, Anne, and worked happily at a hairdressing salon.The woman, who chose the young trainee to be her bridesmaid for her wedding, said:”She disputed her hours of work. He said: “We were a newly married couple and I am devastated with regards to the death of my wife, Chanel.”We were looking forward to a long life together. Mr Rodgers, 55, who gave his daughter away at her wedding seven weeks ago, is being hunted by police in connection with her murder.The friend, a former employer of the hairdresser, who did not want to be named, said Mrs Taylor became withdrawn when he was around and frightened to step out of line.Detectives made a direct appeal yesterday for Mr Rodgers to come forward, but gave few details about his relationship with his daughter.She was discovered at their home in Huthwaite last Friday by her new husband, Lee Taylor, 22. A hairdresser shot dead in her home was scared of her possessive father, whom police want to trace in connection with the murder, it was claimed yesterday.
Chanel Taylor, 23, was controlled by her father, Terry Rodgers, who moved into her home in Nottinghamshire just weeks before her death, a friend said.
Birmingham county court heard that, in spite of three previous notices, her music was so loud that it made the floors of the flat above vibrate, moving furniture.A Birmingham anti-social behaviour unit official who went to speak to neighbours could hardly hear what they were saying, the court was told.. A noisy neighbour has been banned from owning a stereo or a television after playing music so loud that furniture in neighbouring flats was moved by the vibrations.
Birmingham City Council welcomed the two-year anti- social behaviour order imposed on Sharon McLoughlin, 33, who is also being evicted from her council flat.District Judge Alistair MacDuff granted the city council possession of the property within 14 days and prohibited McLoughlin, a fan of Eminem, from owning any electronic music equipment or television while she lives at the flat.She was also banned from causing harassment, alarm or distress in England and Wales for two years. Police said he usually wears a baseball cap and dark clothing and may have a shaved head or very short hair.* A 37-year-old woman and an 18-year-old man have been arrested in connection with the murder and released on police bail pending further inquiries.. “I would ask the public not to approach him but to contact the police if they see him.”We want to speak to Robert Boyer in connection with the murder of Keith Frogson, and we urgently need to hear from anyone who knows him or who has spoken to him recently.”Mr Boyer is described as white, around 5ft 9in and of slim build. “My warning to people in the area is not to let your children play alone because we cannot rule out that he could cause further harm,” he said yesterday.

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