Man changes pleas to guilty over Liverpool parade incident

Police officers stand at a cordon on in Water Street in Liverpool, northwest England on May 27, 2025, after a car plowed in to crowds gathered to watch an open-top bus victory parade for Liverpool’s Premier League trophy parade. (AFP)
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Updated 26 November 2025
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Man changes pleas to guilty over Liverpool parade incident

  • Paul Doyle sobbed in the dock at Liverpool Crown Court as he changed his pleas to guilty to offenses

LONDON: A British man on Wednesday pleaded guilty to 31 criminal charges over the incident in which a car plowed into a crowd of Liverpool football fans during May’s Premier League title victory parade.

Paul Doyle, 53, sobbed in the dock at Liverpool Crown Court as he changed his pleas to guilty to offenses including causing grievous bodily harm with intent, attempting to cause grievous bodily harm and dangerous driving.

He had pleaded not guilty in September and was due to stand trial starting on Wednesday.

The incident took place on May 26 in Liverpool’s packed city center as about a million people came out to celebrate Liverpool’s title win and watch an open-top bus parade featuring the team and its staff with the Premier League trophy.


Lithuania to declare ‘emergency situation’ over Belarus balloons: PM

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Lithuania to declare ‘emergency situation’ over Belarus balloons: PM

  • “We are currently preparing the legal basis and documents,” Ruginiene told reporters
  • “We do not rule out going further,” Ruginiene added. Declaring a state of emergency is a possible stronger step

VILNIUS: Lithuania’s Prime Minister announced on Friday that the country will declare a national “emergency situation” over the influx of smuggler’s balloons launched from Belarus.
“We are currently preparing the legal basis and documents,” Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene told reporters, calling the emergency declaration “the best course of action at this time.”
The ‘emergency situation’ enables the government and local authorities to dedicate extra resources to combatting the balloons.
“We do not rule out going further,” Ruginiene added. Declaring a state of emergency is a possible stronger step.
As a result of balloon incursions, Lithuania’s two largest airports, in Vilnius and Kaunas, have on several occasions been forced to halt operations.
Lithuanian officials claim that the balloons, which fly up to 10 kilometers (six miles) high, are deliberately being launched into the airport’s flight paths, and constitute an attack on its civil aviation.
Though the balloons, which contain cigarettes, have long been used by smugglers, they have only in the last few months prompted airport closures.
The Baltic state, a member of NATO and the European Union, has long accused Belarus, a close ally of Putin’s Russia, of organizing “hybrid warfare.”
The activity, which amplified in October, caused Lithuania to close its two border crossings with Belarus at the end of the month.
Belarus then prevented Lithuanian trucks from driving on its roads and barred them from leaving the country without first paying a fee, which Vilnius decried as “being held hostage” by Belarus.
Thousands of Lithuanian lorries remain stuck in Belarus, with Minsk calling for consultations with the Lithuanian foreign ministry.
Lithuania has instead called for harsher sanctions on Belarus.