Summary

  • Rape case PC 'caught playing video games'

  • School stabbing teenager told 'all sentencing options open'

  • Phone scam gang due to be sentenced

  • Number of breath tests carried out by Humberside Police falls by 70% over six years

  • Bus firm may donate double decker to homeless charity

  • City announces culture leaders

  • Updates on Friday 1 December 2017

  1. Appeal over missing Scunthorpe womanpublished at 11:24 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017

    Kimberley Metcalfe
    BBC Local Live

    Humberside police say they are becoming increasingly concerned for the welfare of missing 25-year- old Kirsty Ashley from Scunthorpe.

    Kirsty AshleyImage source, Humberside Police

    Kirsty was reported missing by a relative on 16 October. There have been a number of unconfirmed sightings and reports that she is safe and well.

    Police believe she is choosing not to get in contact with them but would like her to come forward.

    Kirsty is 5 feet 3 tall, slim, with a number of tattoos, some of which are visible on her hands, wrist and neck.

  2. Chennai Six: Britons jailed in India win appealpublished at 10:41 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017

    Six British former soldiers who were imprisoned on weapons charges in India since 2013 are to be released.

    (From top left, clockwise) Nick Dunn, Paul Towers, Nick Simpson, Ray Tindall, John Armstrong and Billy Irving

    They were arrested while working as guards on ships to combat piracy in the Indian Ocean.

    The so-called Chennai Six always denied the charges, which were initially quashed but later reinstated. They were sentenced to five years in 2016.

    The former soldiers appealed, and a judge has just ruled that they be acquitted.

    The men, who were working on the anti-piracy ship MV Seaman Guard Ohio, are:

    • Nick Dunn from Ashington, Northumberland
    • Billy Irving from Connel, Argyll
    • Ray Tindall from Chester
    • Paul Towers from Pocklington, East Yorkshire
    • John Armstrong from Wigton, Cumbria
    • Nicholas Simpson from Catterick, North Yorkshire
  3. British former soldiers acquitted of all chargespublished at 10:18 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017
    Breaking

    Kimberley Metcalfe
    BBC Local Live

    A lawyer representing 6 British former soldiers convicted in 2016 for possession of firearms says they have been acquitted of all charges.

    They were arrested in Oct 2014 off the coast of southern India.

  4. Hull City boss calls six-game winless run 'painful'published at 10:05 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017

    Matt Dean
    BBC Radio Humberside

    Hull City boss Leonid Slutsky has said it would be "normal" for the club to sack him after their poor run of form.

    The Tigers blew a two-goal lead to lose 3-2 at home to Bristol City on Saturday and are now without a win in six.

    Leonid SlutskyImage source, Getty Images
    Quote Message

    "It is a normal situation, we haven't won in our last six matches. It is a normal to change coach in this situation, but it will be his (owner Assem Allam's) decision."

    Leonid Slutsky, Hull City Manager

    The Tigers were relegated from the Premier League last season and are just four points above the Championship relegation zone.

    Should the 46-year-old Russian lose his job it would leave Hull looking for a fourth manager in 18 months since Steve Bruce resigned in July 2016.

  5. Decision day for future of Yorkshire men jailed in Indiapublished at 09:37 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017

    A decision is expected later over the future of three former soldiers from Yorkshire who've been imprisoned in India since 2013.

    The six men jailed in India

    Paul Towers, from Pocklington, Ray Tindall, from Hull, and Nicholas Simpson, from Catterick, are among six people who were arrested on firearms charges while on an anti-piracy ship.

    Their families have been campaigning for the government to help in their release.

    Their trial has finished and a judgement is expected today.

  6. Fines could be handed out for incorrect waste in recycling binspublished at 08:38 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017

    Gemma Dawson
    BBC Look North

    People in Hull who put the wrong rubbish in their blue recycling bins could end up being fined in the future.

    Recycling truck

    The city council says it costs about £500,000 a year to deal with contaminated waste and it might pursue enforcement powers if things don't improve.

    Dirty nappies and used syringes are among the items regularly found.

  7. Watch: Today's weatherpublished at 08:07 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017

    Lisa Gallagher
    Weather presenter, BBC Look North

    A bright and breezy day with frequent showers and sunny spells in between.

    Watch my full forecast.

  8. Welcome to Monday's live coveragepublished at 08:00 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2017

    Kimberley Metcalfe
    BBC Local Live

    Good morning and welcome to today's live feed across East Yorkshire and northern Lincolnshire on Monday 27 November.

    I'm Kim and I'll be with you until 18:00 with all the latest news, sport, travel and weather updates.

    If there's anything you'd like to get in touch with me about, you can do so via email, Facebook, external and Twitter, external.