A number of notable crimes have been committed in or connected to Rothbury.
1919 armed robbery of Rothbury Brewery Dubbed by a newspaper as a "Wild West Drama", on the night of 28 February 1919, an attempted armed robbery took place at the Rothbury Brewery. Two Russian sailors, Peter Klighe and Karl Strautin, broke into the brewery to rob it, however, at around 9:00 pm,
patrol officer PC Francis Sinton was walking past the Brewery, and he approached it after hearing noises of breaking glass. As he did so he told a passer-by named James Curry to fetch the manager, Mr Farndale. As PC Sinton approached the brewery one of the two men appeared from it and shot at Sinton, missing him only slightly, and the two began to tussle as the second man appeared from the brewery and smashed Sinton's head with an iron bar. Curry and Farndale arrived finding PC Sinton laying on the ground, Farnsdale struggled with one of the assailant, however he managed to fight Farnsdale off leaving Farnsdale with the assailant's muffler scarf, with the assailant escaping with his accomplice. After an extensive police search around Northumberland, the two perpetrators were found in Walbottle Dene. Despite being armed with a pistol they gave themselves up. The pair were found wearing clothes stolen from the
Ashington Co-Op, where they also broke into the safe. They were suspected of breaking into a number of safes across the region. They were charged with four counts of burglary and attempted murder, being sentenced to
penal servitude for 13 years before being
deported. PC Sinton was awarded the
King's Police Medal for his gallantry.
1993 armed robbery of the Rothbury Post Office Overnight on 23 and 24 August 1993, Rothbury experienced another armed robbery. An organised crime gang robbed the Rothbury post office of £15,000 (about £30,000 in 2020 money) in cash, stamps and pension books. Armed with iron crowbars and dressed in camouflage and ski masks, the robbers cut the telephone wires, blocked the main road with a stolen council van, and threatened local residents.
2010 Northumbria police manhunt In July 2010, Rothbury was the site of a major police manhunt.
Raoul Moat was released from
HM Prison Durham on 1 July, after an 18-week sentence for assaulting a nine-year-old relative. During his prison sentence, his girlfriend had a relationship with a police officer that she kept secret from Moat; his business also collapsed while he was in prison, for which he blamed the police. After his release, he discovered his girlfriend's relationship; he shot and killed her new boyfriend, 29-year-old karate instructor Chris Brown, and attempted to kill her. Then, while driving on the
A1, he attacked police officer
David Rathband, stationed in a patrol car on the roundabout of the
A1 and
A69 roads near
East Denton, permanently
blinding him. (Rathband hanged himself at home in Blyth 18 months later.) Moat then went on the run for six days (3–9 July), hiding in and around Rothbury. Police then cornered him by the river on the night of 9 July. After a six-hour stand-off, with Moat holding a gun to his head the entire time, Moat committed
suicide by shooting himself early on the morning of 10 July. ==Notable people==