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This is unique opportunity for members of the public to purchase a variety items ranging from a pedal cycle to an ex-police car. All items listed for sale are all subject to the Leicestershire Police Property Policy and the Police (Property) Act 1997Our Flickr website aims to reunite owners of lost or stolen property with their goods. The website will show a gallery of photographs and encourages owners to come forward and reclaim their missing items. After 28 days, items will be offered for sale to the general public through our eBay site. It should be noted however, that items will remain on Flickr during the listing period and can be claimed by the owner at any point before payment has been received. Our second eBay store sells all other property that the police need to dispose of including all unclaimed and unidentified, found and seized property, along with surplus police assets. Items from the Flickr store will be on sale here if no owner is found within 28 days.
Our eBay store offers items for sale that have been recovered from law breakers. The confiscated goods sold were bought legitimately by criminals with ‘dirty’ money. All proceeds go back to Central Government to be reinvested into frontline policing and community projects. You can purchase items that have formed part of a Court ‘Confiscation Order’ under the Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA) 2002, from what is the first auction site of its kind in the UK.shinko motorcycle tire ratings Followers of our @LeicsPolice Twitter feed will get instant notifications of new eBay items as soon they are posted for sale.honda motorcycle dealership asheville ncShane Sutton stepped down as the head of British Cycling on Wednesday and the wheels came off as Great Britain riders celebrated his demise, claiming he presided over a ‘toxic culture of fear, nepotism, bullying and corruption’.motorcycle parts hastings fl
The Australian strongly denies the allegations, but with only 99 days to go until Rio 2016, one Olympic hopeful remarked that even with the Games so close it was worth being without a head coach whose reign had become poisonous.‘Absolutely 100 per cent there was a culture of fear for years,’ said another British Cycling insider. 883 harley for sale australia‘He was such a manipulative, nasty man and a bully.motorcycle helmets milwaukee wisconsin Shane Sutton stepped down as the head of British Cycling on Wednesday with Rio fast approachingmotorcycle superstore in dallas tx Sutton (right) stands alongside Victoria Pendleton, Laura Trott, Jess Varnish and Chris Hoy (L-R) in 2012‘He’d bully somebody and put his arm round them the next second and that’s how he got his allies, because they were so scared of being bullied again. motorcycle repair shops in keller tx
Shane was the central baddie but not the only one and there is more to come.’There is already further strife on the horizon with revealing UK Sport have demanded an investigation into claims official Team GB performance kit was being sold online for profit.There are also suggestions that state-of-the-art road bikes — worth up to £10,000 and purchased with National Lottery money — have gone missing, while GB kit, including high-performance skinsuits, have been made available to buy on ebay for £99. A UK Sport spokesman said: ‘We have asked British Cycling to investigate as a matter of urgency because it is vital we protect our investment.’ Jess Varnish makes sensational claims against British cycling chief: I was told to go and have a baby... and my bum was too big UK Sport back Varnish 'sexism' inquiry after cyclist says she was told to 'move on and get on with having a baby' Women in Sport calls for further investigation into alleged sexist comments made against Varnish British cycling IS sexist says Victoria PendletonShane Sutton suspended by British Cycling after bullying row... and chief coach faces new
claims of crude para-cyclist remarks Jess Varnish launches staunch defence of British Cycling sexism and bullying claims, 'people are too scared to talk'  Banned Shane Sutton faces bullying probe, and new claims emerge that he allegedly referred to GB para-cyclists as 'wobblies' and 'gimps'Shane Sutton quits as British cycling chief... and now mystery of missing £10,000 bikes adds to crisisWheels come off British cycling as Shane Sutton steps down and stars reveal sport's toxic culture  Both issues will be scrutinised by an independent probe into what appears to be chaotic mis-management at the heart of one of the key Olympic sports. Cycling has received £30.5million in funding from UK Sport over a four-year period in the run-up to the Rio Olympics. also understands that Sutton, who was being paid a six-figure salary by British Cycling as their technical director, is receiving a retainer worth thousands of pounds a month from Team Sky, despite having stepped down as their head coach in 2013.A Team Sky spokesman said: ‘Shane has maintained an involvement in the team since stepping down as head coach in January 2013. 
'We do not release details of the salaries of anyone employed by, or previously employed by, Team Sky.’ Sprint cyclist Jess Varnish and highly decorated Paralympian Darren Kenny blew the lid in  on Sutton’s regime with allegations of sexism and discrimination.European, Commonwealth and world medallist Varnish said Sutton told her ‘go and have a baby’ after dropping her from the Olympic squad, and that her ‘ass’ was ‘too big’ for certain roles on the team.Kenny and other sources claim Sutton referred to para-cyclists as ‘gimps’ and ‘wobblies’. The allegations led to Sutton — who was made an OBE in 2010 — resigning as technical director on Wednesday.More riders and staff members, past and present, are now coming forward to tell their stories, although others have come out in strong support of Sutton.Olympic gold medallist Geraint Thomas said: ‘There is absolutely no place for inequality in sport, and the recent accusations made against British Cycling need to be looked at and treated seriously.‘
However, I would like to talk about my personal experience and say that Shane is one of the main reasons I am where I am today.‘He has always wanted the best for British riders and gone the extra mile for us.‘The inequity issues won’t finish with Shane’s resignation. There is a problem with inequality in cycling as a whole that needs to be addressed.’Sutton, who took over as head coach at British Cycling in 2014 after working as No 2 to Dave Brailsford in the run-up to London 2012, certainly divides opinion, but his tactical brain and commitment to winning championship medals are not in question.Former Great Britain track and road cyclist Rob Hayles told BBC Radio 5 Live: ‘He was very good with the riders, with the coaching and the mental side. ‘He worked extremely well alongside Sir Dave Brailsford. They were good cop, bad cop, but unfortunately bad cop, bad cop does not work at all.‘There is a climate of fear and that has been shown. It was all started when Jess Varnish did not make qualification for Rio in the women’s team sprint.
She was very outspoken and I think the proof is in the pudding — she is gone.‘I am fairly confident that had she not said anything and just got on with it, she would still be on the squad. This is the problem — a lot of the riders and staff are treading in fear in the velodrome.‘If Shane is gone now, there will be a certain amount of relaxing. People can get on with their jobs and look after their performances up until the Olympics.’Among the most damaging claims made against Sutton was that he called members of the highly successful Para GB team ‘gimps’.One source told that Sutton had said: ‘Get those f****** gimps off the track.’Disability charity Scope reacted with horror. Lisa Quinlan-Rahman, director of external affairs, said: ‘It’s shocking to hear allegations of this kind of outdated and discriminatory language being used to mock disabled sportspeople.’Tim Hollingsworth, head of the British Paralympic Association, said: ‘London 2012 was really important in demonstrating the world-class nature of Paralympic sport and we are looking to Rio to do even more of that job and show the public the incredible athletes that compete and continue that journey of transforming perceptions of disability.’
British cyclist Darren Kenny, a bronze medallist at London 2012, blew the lid on Sutton's regime Varnish, pictured here in 2015, said Sutton told her to ‘go and have a baby' after she was dropped Sutton (right) was suspended following allegations of discriminatory behaviour towards some of his chargesThere were new allegations on Wednesday of discriminatory language used by Sutton, although one rider excused it as ‘just his sense of humour’.Malaysian cyclist Josiah Ng alleged Sutton called him ‘Boatie’, which could be interpreted as a reference to people sailing from Asia to seek asylum in Australia.Ng said: ‘I could have taken offence and maybe I should have, but I chose to shrug it off as his twisted sense of humour.‘There are always people who act the way he does. It looks like it’s catching up with him. I’d say, “Hey Sutto”, and he’d say, “Hey Boatie, how you going?” Never in a negative context, but I don’t know if he was aware it was derogatory.‘
I don’t think he’s racist. His actions are racist, but I don’t think he’s a racist.’Sutton denies the allegations made against him. He said in a statement: ‘The developments over the past few days have clearly become a distraction. It is for this reason that I believe it is in the best interests of British Cycling for me to step down.‘I reject the specific claims that have been made against me in recent days and I look forward to taking a full part in the review process so I can respond to the allegations in detail.’Andy Harrison, formerly programmes director at British Cycling, has taken over the technical director role with immediate effect and will lead the team in the build-up to Rio 2016. British Cycling chief executive Ian Drake said Sutton’s resignation would ‘hopefully’ not derail the sport’s medal charge.He told the BBC: ‘We have to get the independent review right and there is no point having a system where people feel they are not in a supportive environment.
We need to build a system which will continue achieving success in the future.’ Sutton, pictured here at the National Cycling Centre in Manchester, stepped down from his job on WednesdayJess Varnish dropped from the Great Britain Olympic cycling team after failing to qualify in the two-woman, two-lap team sprint.Shane Sutton says: ‘Jess had not made the necessary gains in performance compared to the rest of the world.’Varnish claims to that Sutton made sexist comments towards her after shattering her Olympic dream. He is reported to have told the 25-year-old she was ‘too old’, should ‘move on and get on with having a baby’ and that her ‘ass’ was too big.UK Sport welcome an investigation into allegations by Varnish in the interview. British Cycling and Sutton fervently deny any wrongdoing.Victoria Pendleton backs up Varnish’s claims about Sutton, saying her experiences at British Cycling were very similar. Pendleton says she ‘wholeheartedly believed’ Varnish, saying she never felt she had the same respect as her male team-mates.