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Here is the original story.
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Nottingham Evening Post
August 8, 2006 Tuesday
HEADLINE: Taxi held up at gunpoint
BYLINE: KEVIN PEACHEY
Three men held up a taxi at gunpoint in a terrifying nighttime incident.
The trio forced the taxi to stop before one wearing a mask pulled open the passenger door and pointed a gun into the back of the cab. The other two stood in front of the vehicle. But the driver sped off after hearing the gun "pop". It happened at the junction of Wilford Grove and Bathley Street in The Meadows at 2am on Sunday.
The passengers were Evening Post reporters Alex Claydon, 26, and Rebecca Sherdley, 33. "The three lads just appeared from nowhere," said Miss Sherdley. "At first I just thought they were crossing the road but then they did not move." The 30-second ordeal was close to the site of the weekend's Riverside Festival.
The reporters, who were returning to their homes in West Bridgford after a friend's wedding reception in the city, travelled via The Meadows in the pre-booked taxi to drop off a friend. As it slowed to drive over speed humps, the three men blocked the path of the car at the well-lit corner.
Mr Claydon said: "One of them wearing a red bandana around his face pulled out a gun and grabbed the handle of the passenger side door." They said they heard the gun "pop" inside the car. "We just started shouting, 'Drive! Drive! He has got a gun'," said Mr Claydon. "I have never been so terrified." The other two men stood aside as the taxi drove towards them.
As soon as they reached home, Mr Claydon called police and two armed response teams were dispatched. A Notts police spokeswoman said officers were hunting the three men. CCTV images from the area were being studied.
She said there was no evidence of the gun being fired. It remains unclear whether it was real or an imitation. Mr Claydon, who praised the swift police response, said: "We work day to day talking to victims of crime and we know how serious it is. "To suddenly become a part of that was unimaginably awful. It is important this does not happen to anyone else."
Miss Sherdley said: "If I had been on my own in the taxi, I would have been absolutely terrified." The gunman was described as Asian, in his mid-20s, slim, and wearing a red bandana and dark clothing.
Writing in the Evening Post after the latest crime figures were published, Notts Chief Constable had welcomed the fact gun crime in Notts fell by 17.4% in 2005/06 compared to 2004/05.
Ray Butterworth, spokesman for The Association of Nottinghamshire Private Hire Operators, said night-time attacks on drivers were still a concern. He said they were being offered safety screens and in-car cameras with sound recording, but many were refusing them because they cost £400 each. "They would be a form of insurance and a means to give drivers more confidence," he said.
Anyone with information about the incident should contact DC Steven Willetts of Central CID on 0115 967 0999 ext 5132, or Crimestoppers in confidence on 0800 555111.
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