He says he was walking home from work when he was caught in the crossfire of one street battle, with a bullet ripping through his collar bone.
Officers were called to Jubilee Park in Blaby on Sunday after receiving reports that the cows were on the loose at the visitor spot.Police said despite being told there was a "small number", there turned out to be a group of 30 cattle.
They said that they were a "cause of concern" due to dog walkers and families using the children's play park.A post on Blaby Police's Facebook page said: "After a bit of running around and herding and enquiries completed around where they had come from and who they belonged to, the owner came and brought the cavalry and put our herding skills to shame."Two vehicles originally built for a brewery firm have been taken on by museums in an effort to preserve them.
A Victorian horse-drawn fire truck, known as a Water Witch, has been delivered to the West Midlands Fire Service Heritage Museum in Aston, Birmingham.It was made in 1879 for Mitchells and Butlers Brewery, based in Cape Hill, Smethwick, and had been part of the National Brewery Heritage Trust's collection.
The vehicle will be displayed alongside the fire service museum's other appliances, which include a steamer, trailer pumps and hose carts, in a purpose-built garage.
Meanwhile, the National Brewery Heritage Trust, based in Burton-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, has transferred a 1949 Leyland Beaver delivery dray, also built for Mitchells and Butlers, to the Black Country Living Museum in Dudley.And some opinion polls suggest Reform's march upwards in popularity may be easing.
Now this humdinger of a row with Rupert Lowe.Nigel Farage's parties have bounced back from spats like this one before.
The question this time is whether these are growing pains of a rapidly expanding and professionalising outfit or something more chronically limiting.To Nigel Farage's admirers, he is one of the politicians of his generation without which Reform and its predecessors would be nothing.