Life inside UK’s most dangerous town where feral kids on quad bikes run roost – & it’s too terrifying for buses to stop

Life inside UK’s most dangerous town where feral kids on quad bikes run roost – & it’s too terrifying for buses to stop
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Life inside UK’s most dangerous town where feral kids on quad bikes run roost – & it’s too terrifying for buses to stop
Author: Jonathan Rose
Published: Feb, 17 2025 13:08

A BOY of eight leans against a wall and takes furtive drags from a vape as he chats to an older mate. Meanwhile, youngsters on scooters tear through the Viewley Shopping Centre in Hemlington, Middlesbrough, throwing insults at elderly ladies as they pass. This is the police area of Cleveland - the UK's most crime ridden borough with 128.5 offences per 1000 people. New figures from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) showed it to be the most dangerous place to live in the country.

 [Two women with dogs in Cleveland, UK.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Two women with dogs in Cleveland, UK.]

And residents have told how they are terrorised by "feral" gangs of kids, making them too afraid to venture out at night. Local David Liddell, a 58-year-old carer, told The Sun: "The crime figures are no surprise to me at all. Knife crime here is horrific. "One of our carers was the victim of an attack so now we have to double up. There were three lads outside a house waiting. "Since then two carers have got to go in together in case one needs to call for help.

 [Aerial view of Brambles Farm in Cleveland, UK.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Aerial view of Brambles Farm in Cleveland, UK.]

"The council have to foot the bill so it's doubling the price for them. There's loads of bikes, quad bikes, drugs runners.". Hemlington is a housing estate built round a man-made lake. It was the scene of a horrific attack on a police officer at the end of 2023 where the officer was set upon by a gang and injured so badly he had to leave the force. Five men were jailed for a total of 20 years for the violence, which left the officer with PTSD.

 [Portrait of Charlie Mangan, a Brambles Farm resident.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Portrait of Charlie Mangan, a Brambles Farm resident.]

But David fears police have little way of stopping such crimes unfold. "The police don't do anything," he said. "Even if they're watching they don't do anything at all. "They can't stop them on a motorbike. They're not allowed to. They can't chase them. The drugs are rife. "We need more police but I am not quite sure what they would do anyway.". The carer said he knows someone who had a car dumped outside of their house.

 [Portrait of Ronnie Smith, a Brambles Farm resident, in Cleveland.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Portrait of Ronnie Smith, a Brambles Farm resident, in Cleveland.]

But although it had "been wrecked" he claims little was done to resolve the matter. "They had broken it up and taken the parts," David explained. "The police towed it away but they didn't investigate. It's crazy. "During the day it's not too bad. You have a lovely lake and some nice residents. "It's when it falls dark. The drug runners come out. No one walks along here. It's scary. "It's a no-go area. I hadn't heard about the police officer who was attacked. It doesn't surprise me though.".

 [Closed Simo's Pizzeria in Cleveland.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Closed Simo's Pizzeria in Cleveland.]

Joyce Sturdy and friend Sharon Nicholson are both grandmothers who use mobility scooters. And as they stopped to chat to our reporter about what it's like to live in Hemlington two young lads on scooters yelled: "Gangsta grannies!". Sharon, who was walking her dogs Eddie and Beau, rolled her eyes and said: "See what we mean?". Joyce, 74, told The Sun: "We have a lot of youth hanging around here at night time round the lake.

 [Hemlington, Cleveland: Shops with closed shutters and a pedestrian.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Hemlington, Cleveland: Shops with closed shutters and a pedestrian.]

The police don't do anything. Even if they're watching they don't do anything at all. "People come round the estate on their motorbikes. It doesn't surprise me that it's the worst. "A lot of respect has gone. You can't chastise children anymore. There's no discipline.". The retired school cook added: "You're not allowed to do anything. We have become too soft as a society. "They have taken power away from the police as well. I have lived here 30 odd years.

 [Aerial view of Brambles Farm in Cleveland, UK.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Aerial view of Brambles Farm in Cleveland, UK.]

"I used to live in a house which backed onto a hill. The children would all play together. "We'd walk them to school together. The parents would get together. You don't see any of that now.". Sharon, a 63-year-old retired driving instructor, agreed, insisting: "All the kids want to do is wreck everywhere. "They are pulling fences down. They are burning the bins. The kids are feral. "A lot of the youngsters are doing it because the bigger ones are getting them to do it.

 [Photo of Glenna Siviter.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Photo of Glenna Siviter.]

"We don't feel safe here. I never used to bring my phone with me but I worry something might happen so I do now.". All the kids want to do is wreck everywhere. Sharon said she no longer goes out at night, with the added fear the cops might not be able to help if something happens. "After 5pm we stay inside," she said. "The police seem powerless. They never come out. "They do not have the resources. But then again if there was a bigger police presence it could instigate more trouble.".

 [Mugshots of five men sentenced for attacking police officers.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Mugshots of five men sentenced for attacking police officers.]

The women claim taxis and buses won't travel down Cass House Road, where the officer was attacked, at night out of fear of getting bricked. Anthony Bass, 67, a retired marine diver, added: "There is a lot of trouble. "We have motorbikes fleeing from here and into the estate over there and the police chasing after them. "We also have quad bikes running about. We had a motorcycle with three little boys on it with ninja masks.

"The lady in the post office has had to lock her door because she's been robbed so many times. "It frightened a lot of the older people and the shopkeepers. It's a bit disconcerting to say the least.". Anthony said he is "not really surprised by the figures," and that "crime goes where the poor people are". "They have got nothing so it's nothing to them to take things that don't belong to them," he said.

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