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Search For Missing Neighbour Ends With Bizarre Underground Rubbish Bin Rescue

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what had started as a two-minute mission to rescue a set of keys became an unexpected prison. Photo credit: Policía Arganda del Rey on Facebook

We’ve all done it, dropped our keys somewhere awkward, stared at them for a moment and wondered whether it’s worth trying to get them back. For one man in Madrid, that split-second decision turned into a 45-minute ordeal inside an underground rubbish container, complete with desperate cries for help and a rescue by firefighters. It sounds like something from a comedy sketch, but for the man involved it was anything but funny at the time.

The incident happened in Arganda del Rey, on the outskirts of Madrid, after the man accidentally dropped his house keys into an underground rubbish container. Rather than accepting defeat and arranging a replacement set, he decided to climb inside to retrieve them. It seemed like a quick solution, unfortunately, it wasn’t.

A simple plan that quickly went wrong

After climbing into the container, the man managed to get inside but soon discovered there was one major problem. The safety system designed to stop people falling into the underground bin also made it almost impossible for him to climb back out. Suddenly, what had started as a two-minute mission to rescue a set of keys became an unexpected prison.

For around 45 minutes, , unable to free himself. Realising nobody knew where he was, he began shouting: “Please, help!” It was a plea that fortunately didn’t go unheard.

His cries for help attracted attention

A nearby neighbour, identified as Gustavo, heard someone shouting from the street and initially struggled to work out where the voice was coming from. It wasn’t every day someone called for help from inside a rubbish container.

After locating the trapped man, Gustavo contacted the emergency services and stayed nearby to reassure him while firefighters made their way to the scene. As more neighbours realised what had happened, a small crowd gathered around the container, hoping the rescue would be straightforward.

Firefighters came to the rescue

Getting the man out wasn’t as simple as opening a lid, the underground waste containers use a counterweighted mechanism designed to make them safe and secure, meaning firefighters had to lift part of the system before they could reach him.

After around three-quarters of an hour trapped inside, the man was finally pulled to safety. Witnesses said he emerged covered in sweat, visibly shaken, with cuts to his hands after repeatedly trying to climb back out and an unpleasant odour that could make cats cry. Neighbours quickly handed him water while he recovered from the ordeal. Fortunately, despite the uncomfortable experience, he did not suffer any serious injuries.

An embarrassing story with a happy ending

Looking back, it’s easy to imagine the man wishing he’d simply called a locksmith. Replacing a set of keys is rarely cheap, but it’s probably preferable to spending 45 minutes inside a rubbish container waiting for firefighters to arrive.

The incident has attracted plenty of attention because it’s exactly the kind of situation many people can imagine themselves getting into. Faced with the choice between losing something valuable and trying to retrieve it, plenty of us might think, “I’ll just be a second.” Sometimes, however, those “quick jobs” have a habit of lasting much longer than expected.

A reminder to think twice

While the story has raised a few smiles, it also carries an important message. Underground rubbish containers are designed with safety features that prevent people from easily entering or falling inside. Those same features can make it extremely difficult to get back out without assistance.

Trying to recover dropped belongings may seem harmless, but climbing into these containers can quickly become dangerous, particularly in hot weather or if nobody knows where you are. This time, the man’s calls for help were heard by someone passing nearby. Had the street been quieter, the outcome could have been very different.

So, the next time your keys, phone or wallet disappear somewhere awkward, it might be worth taking a moment before climbing in after them. After all, a call to a locksmith is probably less memorable than becoming the neighbourhood’s most unexpected rescue story.

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Alec Baldwin’s Mallorca Family Summer

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For many celebrities, a summer holiday is all about luxury yachts and exclusive beach clubs. But for Alec Baldwin’s wife Hilaria Baldwin, this year’s trip to Mallorca has been something far more personal: introducing her seven children to the island that has become the heart of her family’s life.

A family reunion in Mallorca

Hilaria has spent the past few days exploring Mallorca with the couple’s seven children while reuniting with her parents and brother, who have lived on the island for more than a decade. Alec Baldwin has not been pictured on the trip, with Hilaria revealing beforehand that she was travelling to Spain alone with the children for the first time.

Sharing regular updates on social media, the 42-year-old yoga instructor and entrepreneur described the visit as the “best time” with family, posting photos and videos of beach outings, strolls through Palma, ice cream stops and relaxed moments together.

Discovering the island together

Rather than staying in one resort, the family appears to have explored several corners of Mallorca.

Images shared online show the children walking along Palma’s fashionable Jaime III shopping avenue, spending time on the coast, enjoying traditional paella by the sea and visiting the inland town of Inca. The holiday has mixed sightseeing with everyday island life, including supermarket trips and family meals, giving the children a taste of the place where their maternal grandparents now call home.

One photograph featuring Hilaria and her brother also caught the attention of followers, many commenting on their striking resemblance.

A new summer tradition?

Before leaving for Spain, Hilaria had spoken openly about wanting to spend much of July in Mallorca with her extended family, describing the trip as a trial run for future summers.

After successfully making the journey with all seven children, she later admitted she felt “empowered” by how smoothly the experience had gone, saying it had shown her the family could spend more time in Spain now the children are getting older.

For the Baldwins, Mallorca is more than another celebrity holiday destination. It is a place of family history, where grandparents, cousins and lifelong memories come together, and one that could become the backdrop for many more summers to come.

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Tin Foil Clue Exposes A Car Theft Gang

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Guardia Civil haul in Mijas. Credit: GC

Guardia Civil officers in the Costa del Sol have dismantled an active, highly mobile criminal gang specialising in stealing valuable belongings from parked cars. Investigators arrested three gang members who allegedly targeted busy supermarket and shopping centre car parks across Malaga, Mijas, Marbella and Manilva. The police operation successfully put an end to a crime spree that had caused frustration and upset among local residents and tourists.

Victims regularly reported their vehicles had been raided without any physical signs of forced entry, despite being certain they had locked their doors correctly when they left them to go shopping. Officers from the Mijas Guardia Civil headquarters launched a detailed inquiry after noticing a sudden increase in theft reports in these specific shopping centre car parks.

Coordination and clever wrapping techniques

Gang members worked in a highly coordinated manner to access these unsuspecting targets. One individual would watch out for potential victims returning to their cars while a second accomplice used sophisticated electronic frequency jammers to block remote key signals, leaving the vehicles completely unlocked. This method allowed them to slip inside the cars without attracting attention.

Suspects then entered the unlocked cars, quickly stealing valuable items like laptops, tablets, mobile phones, sunglasses, luxury watches, and designer handbags. They tried to avoid detection by wrapping these stolen electronic items in kitchen aluminium foil before sending them away using standard postal courier services. This foil wrapping was intended to block GPS tracking signals.

Recovered items returned to rightful owners

Police tracking efforts eventually led to the successful identification and arrest of all three suspects. Investigators have now charged the trio with seven counts of theft, membership of an organised criminal group, and forging official documents.

Officers recovered numerous stolen electronics, luxury watches, and designer handbags during the raid, which have now been returned to their original owners. This successful police action has put an end to an incredibly elusive and technologically advanced theft ring.

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Spain Family Reunification Rules Changed

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Spain’s Supreme Court has ruled that some family reunification applications require an individual assessment rather than an automatic refusal. Credit : antoniodiaz, Shutterstock

For many foreign residents in Spain, one of the biggest worries during an immigration application is the fear of receiving a refusal because of something in their past. A new ruling from the Spanish Supreme Court could make an important difference in some of those cases. The court has decided that the authorities cannot automatically refuse certain residence permits or family reunification applications simply because the applicant has a criminal record when protected family rights are involved.

The judgment, made public on Monday, July 13, leaves most of Spain’s new Immigration Regulation (Reglamento de Extranjería) intact, but it also redraws the line on several issues affecting families, children and foreign nationals living in Spain. While the ruling does not remove criminal records from the immigration process, it does require officials to look at the circumstances of each case instead of applying an automatic refusal.

For thousands of families already living in Spain, or hoping to reunite here, that distinction could prove significant.

What has actually changed?

Much of the attention has focused on one part of the judgment.

Under the new Immigration Regulation, some residence applications could be rejected simply because the applicant had a criminal record. The Supreme Court has now ruled that this approach cannot be applied automatically in cases involving family reunification or other situations where protected family rights or European Union rights are at stake.

That does not mean a criminal record no longer matters.

Instead, immigration authorities must now assess each application individually before making a decision.

In practice, that means officials will have to consider the wider circumstances rather than relying on a single factor. The existence of previous convictions remains relevant, but it can no longer be the only reason for refusing an application where important family rights are involved.

For applicants, that offers something many immigration cases have lacked in the past: the opportunity for their personal situation to be properly examined.

Every case will still be decided on its own facts, but the process should now involve a fuller assessment instead of an automatic administrative decision.

Children are at the centre of several other changes

The judgment goes much further than family reunification.

Several parts of the regulation affecting foreign children have also been struck down after the court concluded they failed to give enough weight to the best interests of the child, a principle recognised in both Spanish and international law.

One example concerns children who were married.

The previous rule could prevent certain residence authorisations from being granted simply because a minor was married. The Supreme Court considered that approach incompatible with protecting vulnerable children.

The judges specifically noted that such a restriction could end up harming young people who had been forced into marriage rather than protecting them.

Another change affects children who were born in Spain.

The court removed restrictions that could disadvantage minors who had temporarily left the country for justified reasons. According to the ruling, those departures should not automatically prevent them from accessing certain residence permits.

The judges also examined situations involving guardianship and child protection arrangements established outside Spain.

Until now, some families encountered difficulties because those protective measures had not been created under Spanish law.

The Supreme Court ruled that Spain must recognise child protection measures adopted by foreign authorities whenever international agreements require it to do so.

For families who have already gone through legal procedures abroad before moving to Spain, that could remove an obstacle that previously complicated residence applications.

Most of Spain’s immigration reform remains unchanged

Although several provisions have been cancelled, the court has not overturned the government’s immigration reform.

In fact, the judges expressly supported what they described as the regulation’s general structure.

That means the new framework introduced by the government largely remains in place, including the updated rules on arraigo, which provide different pathways for certain foreign nationals to regularise their immigration status after meeting specific legal requirements.

The ruling also leaves unchanged the provisions affecting people seeking international protection that were included in the new regulation.

In other words, this is not a complete rewrite of Spain’s immigration system.

Instead, the Supreme Court has identified specific parts of the regulation that it believes went beyond what the law allows, particularly where family life and children’s rights are concerned.

What does this mean if you’re applying for residence in Spain?

For anyone currently preparing an immigration application, the judgment is worth understanding, but it should not be misunderstood.

It does not create an automatic right to residence. It does not erase criminal records and it does not guarantee that family reunification applications will now be approved.

What it does is require immigration authorities to make a more careful assessment in certain situations.

If family unity, the rights of a child or rights linked to European Union law are involved, officials must now look at the whole picture before reaching a decision.

That may sound like a technical legal point, but for many families it could have practical consequences.

Immigration decisions often shape where parents and children live, whether families remain together and whether someone can build a future in Spain. The Supreme Court’s judgment recognises that those decisions should not always depend on a single administrative criterion.

The ruling also reflects a broader principle that runs throughout Spanish and European law: family life deserves particular protection, especially when children are involved.

For foreign nationals already living in Spain, or planning to move here with relatives, the decision provides greater legal clarity. The immigration rules themselves have not been rewritten, but the way some of the most sensitive applications must be examined has changed.

From now on, where protected family rights are at stake, each case must be judged on its own circumstances rather than by applying an automatic refusal from the outset.

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