Today’s Isle of Man Examiner talks to the daughter of a woman who was being cared for in a Manx care home.
She tells us how she felt after learning that her mother was found twice tied up in her own nightdress.
The Examiner includes in-depth coverage today.
Also this week:
The Chief Constable calls for a rethink on drugs laws.
It’s crunch time for the Steam Packet deal.
A 12-page special featuring every class of 11-year-olds who are about to leave primary school.
Another director of collapsed savings fund the Louis Group has quit.
In a separate story we have the latest advice from liquidators of collapsed investment fund New Earth Recycling and Renewables, which is being wound up at the expense of the Manx taxpayer.
A full report on the Vision Nine TT hearing in which the proposed deal was heavily criticised.
The Castle Mona Hotel has been withdrawn from auction. We reveal more.
A petition supporting a proposed ’glamorous camping’ site in Port Erin has 550 signatures.
A former Royal Marine gave £11,000 to charities in the days before he took his own life, an inquest has heard. Our reporter gives a full account of the inquest.
Figures given by an MHK comparing the number of civil servants in the Isle of Man with those in the UK were misleading, a union leader tells us.
Douglas Council is going to try to reach out to its citizens more so they can find out what it’s up to.
A team of archaeologists, students and local volunteers have been investigating what was believed to be a burial mound in fields just south of the village of Kirk Michael. We visit the site to see what they have managed to unearth.
Planners have refused an application by Onchan Commissioners to scrap the tennis courts in Onchan Park.
The long-running saga of Port Erin’s unadopted Maine Road is coming to an end and it is being resurfaced.
A two-page ’buildings at risk’ feature about "moderne" architecture in the Isle of Man.
Picture specials on Douglas Carnival and Castletown’s tin bath races.
One hundred years on from his birth, Sir Charles Kerruish is remembered by Terry Cringle.
Plus the latest property sales, 10 pages of business news, several pages of community news, the social diary, a look back at the Southern 100 and the weekend’s sport, your letters and Terry Cringle’s nostalgia pages.
The Isle of Man’s favourite newspaper is in the shops now.


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