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A man has been charged, another arrested and three youths sentenced as we continue to investigate the violent disorder last summer.

Shay Saville, 22, of Blossom Close, in Tarleton, Lancashire, has been charged in relation to the violent disorder in Southport on Tuesday 30 July 2024. He has been bailed to appear at Liverpool Magistrate’s Court on Friday 7 March.

A 17-year-old boy from Chester, as well as a 14-year-old boy and 13-year-old boy, both from Rock Ferry, appeared at Liverpool Youth Court yesterday, Tuesday 11 February, and were all handed 12-month referral orders for their actions in the disorder in Liverpool.

Meanwhile, a 24-year-old man from Southport was also arrested yesterday, Tuesday 11 February, on suspicion of violent disorder in Southport and he has been bailed pending further inquiries.

It brings the total number of arrests to 174, with 133 charged and 110 sentenced to a combined 210 years and four months in prison.

If you have any information about those who took part in the disorder, we would encourage you to contact us by calling 101, DM us @MerPolCC on social media or call Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

Current galleries of people we would like to speak to can be found on our X and Facebook pages, and on our force website: Latest CCTV appeal in relation to summer disorder in Merseyside | Merseyside Police.

Merseyside Police

A man who was previously jailed for trying to blow up a mosque has been sentenced to more than two years in prison for involvement in last summer’s riots.

Ex-soldier Simon Beech, 36, of Stoke-on-Trent, pleaded guilty in November to violent disorder after being captured on CCTV throwing a missile at police officers.

He was sentenced at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court to two years and three months in prison for his part in the riots, sparked after the killing of three girls in Southport, for which Axel Rudakubana was jailed last month for a minimum of 52 years.

In 2011 Beech, of Chell Heath, attempted to blow up a mosque in Stoke, for which he was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

He was arrested last August after disturbances broke out in in Hanley.

In 2011, Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard Beech and another man – Garreth Foster – ran a pipe into the mosque from a nearby gas meter in a bid to spark an explosion.

The building sustained damage put at £50,000 as a result of a fire that broke out.

Beech told the court during his 2011 trial he had been a member of the English Defence League and the British National Party, but said he was not racist and did not believe his views to be extreme.

Commenting on his guilty plea after the riots, chairman of City Central Mosque Amjid Wazir said Beech did not seem to have learned any lessons.

Disorder spread across England last summer partly due to false claims online about Rudakubana.

Mr Wazir praised the actions by police and the legal system to bring those responsible to justice.

“When the riots were happening in Stoke, and elsewhere in the country, people were so scared of going out,” he said.

“They were worried, they were nervous.”

BBC News

Owen Royden has avoided a jail term

A man hurled missiles and tried to force his way into a Sainsbury’s store as it was looted during rioting in Piccadilly Gardens. Owen Royden, who is homeless, was part of a group that gathered in Manchester city centre on Saturday, August 3 last year.

Part of the ‘very large crowd’ that assembled at around 2.30pm, Royden, 30, was caught on camera ‘throwing a cup to an opposing crowd’, Justin Hayhoe, prosecuting, told Manchester Crown Court.

Royden was also filmed ‘marching’ down Mosley Street behind a group which was ‘chanting in an offensive and really unpleasant way’. As he approached the Sainsbury’s store on Mosley Street, he ‘pulled his clothing up over his face’ and was part of a group which ‘tried to force their way in’.

A number of people have already been sentenced for looting the store. Royden didn’t enter and ‘gave up relatively quickly’, Mr Hayhoe added. Around 15 minutes later, he was seen throwing an unidentified object towards police as a person was being arrested and removed from the crowd at the bottom of Mosley Street. No one was hit or injured.

At around 4.30pm he was issued with a dispersal notice and ordered to leave the city centre. He was identified from footage and arrested a month later. “He decided to join in widespread disorder which caused considerable cost to the public and stores,” Mr Hayhoe said.

Royden, of no fixed address, admitted violent disorder at an earlier hearing. He has previous convictions including for arson and sexual assault.

Patrick Buckley said Royden had mental health difficulties. “He is well aware of the condition he suffers,” he said. “Whilst we all understand the degree of chaos which is caused by living on the streets.”

The Recorder of Manchester, Judge Nicholas Dean KC, told him: “You are only 30, but you have had a troubled time in the last few years.

“That is in part because of your mental health, in parts because of your use of alcohol and drugs. The violent disorder you have pleaded guilty to occurred at a time when, in this country, there was rioting and violent behaviour being perpetrated in ways far more serious than your participation.

“I don’t know what persuaded you to become involved, but involved you were, albeit in a way that can only accurately be described as peripheral. This combination of behaviour qualifies as amounting to violent disorder. But I have dealt with, probably, hundreds of cases of violent disorder and this is a case which falls at the very bottom end of the spectrum of seriousness of such offending.”

He said Royden had ‘got carried away with what others were doing.’ “You’re clearly a vulnerable man, in part because of your mental health, in part because of your addictions, and in part because of your homelessness,” he added.

Judge Dean said it was ‘fortunate’ he didn’t enter Sainsbury’s as ‘if you had involved yourself in looting a shop, I would have had no choice but to send you to prison.’

He imposed a 12 month community order with a nine month alcohol treatment requirement and 25 rehabilitation activity requirement days. “The elements of the sentence won’t solve your problems, but may help you solve them” Judge Dean said.

“You need to turn a corner and help yourself or else you’re likely to find yourself before the courts again and again, and that just means the likelihood of prison,” he added.

Manchester Evening News

Two teenagers have pleaded guilty to rioting, police have said, after disorder over the summer saw a hotel used by asylum seekers targeted by violent groups.

The Holiday Inn in Tamworth was attacked on 4 August as a wave of disorder swept the country.

Aged 14 and 17, the youths cannot be named for legal reasons, but Staffordshire Police said they were only the third and fourth people in the county to face the more serious charge of rioting.

They are due to be sentenced at Cannock Magistrates’ Court on 4 April.

The force said the17-year-old also admitted assaulting an emergency worker.

Officers said they had arrested 200 suspects last year in connection with violent disorder in Stoke-on-Trent and Tamworth, and a total of 82 people had so far been charged.

They said they expected more charges to follow, and that they had been trawling through footage from August to gather the evidence needed to bring cases to court.

Trouble broke out in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, on 3 August, during which police came under fire from missiles, including metal poles and bricks.

Rioters also targeted the Holiday Inn Express in Tamworth a day later, starting a fire.

The disorder was part of a wave of protests and riots that swept the UK in the wake of the Southport stabbings, driven in part by false claims the culprit was an asylum seeker.

BBC News

Two people have received suspended jail terms after admitting racially harassing asylum seekers at a Rotherham hotel, days before mass disorder at the site.

Debbie Walker told people inside the Holiday Inn Express at Manvers a “protest” was “starting now” on 31 July last year, Sheffield Magistrates’ Court heard. Disorder broke out the following weekend.

Lee Frettsome told those inside “I don’t like the colour of your skin or your people… your time will come,” prosecutor Rob Coyne told the court on Wednesday.

Walker and Frettsome admitted racially or religiously aggravated intentional harassment, alarm or distress, and received community orders and nine-month sentences suspended for 18 months.

‘Venomous’

District Judge James Gould said the defendants, who have been in an on-and-off relationship for 25 years, “displayed little insight” into the harm they caused.

He said the fact they knew about events to come was “of note”, given the context of mass violent disorder the following weekend, although they did not take part.

“You had been monitoring social media and no doubt seizing on distorted, unfounded and racially motivated views,” he added.

“The abuse that you both issued was venomous.”

Both Frettsome, 53, and Walker, 50, were “acting aggressively” to asylum seekers, witnesses said, with Walker heard saying “I will kill you all”.

Walker, of Billingley View, Bolton-upon-Dearne, shouted a profanity about Allah at a security guard, said “I will come back” and banged on the glass with her fists.

A member of security staff said in a statement: “I haven’t caused these people any upset. I don’t understand what their intention is.”

He said he was “saddened people want to take time out of their day to upset service users”.

‘Entrenched, warped and racist’

Erika Hradecka, defending, said Walker’s 25-year history of mental ill health, including diagnoses of paranoid schizophrenia and Fregoli syndrome, meant she was “probably not fully aware of what she was doing”.

She added that Frettsome, of Bateman Square, Thurnscoe, who served in the South African army in the 1980s, “says he is not racist, and he is ashamed and remorseful”.

Judge Gould said the couple had “expressed entrenched, warped and racist views”, but that he viewed Walker’s offending in the context of her illness.

Other than Walker having one police caution for cannabis possession, neither had previous convictions or cautions.

Frettsome was ordered to do 10 rehabilitation activity requirement days and 120 hours’ unpaid work. Walker was given 15 rehabilitation requirement days.

Both pleaded guilty at the earliest opportunity and will pay £85 in costs and a £187 surcharge.

BBC News

A woman has been sentenced today, Monday 3 February, for her role in violent disorder in Southport last summer.

Emma McAteer, of Pollard Road in Wavertree, was arrested and charged on Monday 27 January, with violent disorder and burglary in Southport on Tuesday 30 July.

She appeared at Liverpool Crown Court today after pleading guilty at a previous hearing.

The 26-year-old was captured on CCTV throwing three missiles at police officers on Sussex Road. She then pushes through the crowd gathered outside Windsor minimart, enters the shop via a broken open shutter and steals items from the shelf. She is then seen carrying out stolen goods in her arms.

Today, McAteer, was sentenced to two years and four months in prison.

Detective Inspector Paula Jones said: “McAteer has been jailed today for the role she played in the large-scale violent disorder which took place in Southport and resulted in numerous police officers being injured and property being damaged.

“The part she played that day in a community that was in mourning was despicable, and she has now been brought to justice for her disgraceful actions.”

The total number of people arrested for disorder in Merseyside now stands at 171, with 129 charged and 107 sentenced to a combined 210 years and four months in prison.

We would encourage anyone with information to contact us by calling 101 or anonymously via Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Current galleries of people we would like to speak to can be found on our X and Facebook pages, and on our force website: Latest CCTV appeal in relation to summer disorder in Merseyside | Merseyside Police.

Merseyside Police

A heavily-convicted criminal who threw rocks at police and tried to set a bin on fire during anti-immigration riots has been jailed for more than two years.

Lucas Taylor was part of a 400-strong mob that confronted police after peaceful protests turned violent in Middlesbrough on 4 August 2024, Teesside Crown Court heard.

The disorder was one of a number of such violent outbreaks in towns and cities across England in the wake of the murder of three girls in Southport.

Taylor, 44, had initially denied a violent disorder charge but changed his plea to guilty on the opening day of his trial. He was jailed for 25 months.

About 1,000 people were estimated to have joined a protest march in the town, with the procession down Linthorpe Road initially peaceful, prosecutor Rachel Masters said.

But violence broke out when an item was thrown at the march from the direction of Claremont Road, a residential street which was quickly blocked off by police, the court heard.
‘Heat of the moment’

About 400 people, including Taylor, challenged a line of officers at the junction of Linthorpe Road and Ayresome Street at about 16:00 BST with the intention of drawing the police into violence, Ms Masters said.

Taylor, of Worcester Street in Middlesbrough, was caught on camera and seen by police throwing rocks towards officers and attempting to set a wheelie bin on fire, the court heard.

He was arrested several days after the riot after attacking a security guard at Aldi, the court heard.

The court heard Taylor had 141 convictions for 320 offences on his criminal record, including for theft, pubic disorder, drugs and assaults.

In mitigation, Richard Bennett said Taylor was not an instigator of the violence but had been “extremely foolish” and “got caught up in the heat of the moment”.

BBC News

As thugs smashed shops and wreaked violence in Hull city centre during last summer’s riots, Elizabete Zvirgzdina and Lucy Houghton grabbed a basket and helped themselves to stock from Lush and Shoezone stores

Two teenagers gallingly lined their pockets with Crocs and bath bombs as they brazenly looted city centre shops during last summer’s riots.

Elizabete Zvirgzdina and Lucy Houghton helped themselves to stock as shops were smashed and looted during the wave of violence last summer, in which thugs across the country brought violence and destruction to UK streets following the Southport attacks. The two were named and shamed after admitting their role in the shameful displays in August last year.

Appalling images showed yobs breaking into a Lush and Shoezone store in Hull city centre following a nearby riot on what was a weekend of violence described as “a stain on this city”. The two both handled stolen Croc-type sandals which had been taken from the Shoezone by another man and dumped on the pavement.

Zvirgzdina, 19, admitted burglary at the Lush store in Jameson Street, Hull, involving entering the shop as a trespasser and stealing “multiple products” of an unknown value, on August 3, Hull Live reports. She also admitted burglary with intent to steal at the 02 store, also in Jameson Street.

Houghton, also 19, also admitted handling the stolen goods at Hull crown court on Friday. The court heard that shoes, which had been taken from the raided store, in Jameson Street, were put on the pavement outside the shop and both Zvirgzdina and Houghton picked them up and stole them.

CCTV showed Zvirgzdina also entering an O2 store at 6.37pm after the windows had been previously smashed, showing her wandering around but not taking anything. Minutes later, she entered the Lush and even picked up a basket, helping herself to as much stock “as she could carry” from the popular cosmetics store.

The two were later “seen with several pairs of Crocs in their hands,” said prosecutor Jennifer Gatland. Both women handed themselves in to the police on August 5. When Zvirgzdina was searched, she was found in possession of cannabis. Judge Mark Bury said: “That wasn’t very clever – going to the police station with cannabis.”

Zvirgzdina told police that she had drunk five to seven vodka and Cokes. She went to the protest outside the Royal Hotel in Ferensway and said that it was about “kicking all the foreigners out of the hotel”.

She admitted being outside Shoezone and picking up the Crocs and going around Lush with a basket. She claimed that she had gone into O2 “for 30 seconds” and, during the incidents, she had “recorded it on TikTok Live”, the court heard.

“There was some degree of planning,” said Miss Gatland. “Clearly, there was substantial impact and a substantial degree of loss caused by the loss and damage.” Zvirgzdina and Houghton had no previous convictions.

Claire Holmes, mitigating, said: “Both defendants behaved in an appalling way on this particular day but, since then, they have done all that they could to try to put forward their best mitigation. They both handed themselves in to the police station.

“They were both in drink, which is no excuse. Neither defendant seeks to excuse their behaviour in any way. They are both apologetic.” Judge Bury said that one of them later claimed that she was not in drink.

He asked Zvirgzdina: “What were you thinking of then?” She replied: “I didn’t think anything. I just saw everyone else doing it so I thought it was acceptable.”

When Judge Bury told her that it was not acceptable, she hastily added: “I know it’s not acceptable but I see everyone else doing it.” She said that her father lived in Latvia and her mother lived in Gilberdyke. Zvirgzdina said that she had a “little brother” and admitted that her behaviour was a very bad example to set him. “I apologise,” she said. She was working. Judge Bury told her: “For goodness’ sake, stay out of trouble.”

Houghton told the court that she was unemployed. “I have applied for jobs,” she said. Her mother was “ashamed” of her. “I am sorry,” she said.

Judge Bury told her: “You are better than this. You have got to do something with your life. You did something really stupid, although you didn’t yourself break in to any store.”

Judge Bury told both women: “August 3 of last year represents a stain on this city. There was large-scale public disorder of a totally unpleasant, racist and violent type. Police officers were injured. Racial minorities were being verbally abused.

“You were not involved in that, either of you, but later in the day, when the shops had been looted and broken into by people with bats or sometimes just their boots, property was being stolen by people who thought it was the right thing to do to help themselves.” Zvirgzdina also admitted a separate offence of possessing cannabis on August 5.

Judge Bury added: “Both of you are totally ashamed of the things that you did. Both of you are far better people than this. I believe you two are the only two defendants that I have not locked up in these proceedings, so if you want to know how lucky you are, that’s how lucky you are.”

Zvirgzdina was given an eight-month suspended prison sentence and 12 days’ rehabilitation. Houghton was given 40 hours’ unpaid work and 15 days’ rehabilitation.
Daily Mirror

A man has been sentenced today, Friday 31 January, for his role in violent disorder in Southport last summer.

John Rasburn, of Gibson Street, Wigan, appeared at Liverpool Crown Court after pleading guilty at a previous hearing for violent disorder in Southport on Tuesday 30 July.

Rasburn was captured on CCTV at the forefront of the disorder on St Luke’s Road. He was seen throwing a traffic cone at officers who were trying to protect the community. He then went onto confront officers before spitting at them.

The 47-year-old man was seen throwing an item at officers before then running up to an officer and kicking them.

The court heard that on 11 August, Merseyside Police circulated Rasburn as wanted for his role in the disorder. However, on 16 January he handed himself in to a police station in Greater Manchester.

The next day, Merseyside Police detectives arrested and charged Rasburn with Violent Disorder and two counts of assault emergency worker.

Today, Rasburn was sentenced to two years and eight months in prison.

Detective Sergeant Duncan Sloan said: “Rasburn went on to the run but ultimately knew he couldn’t hide forever and would need to answer for his actions and the role he played that day to a community that was in mourning.

“He eventually handed himself in, albeit five months later. I hope Rasburn takes the time while in prison to reflect on his shocking actions that day.”

Detective Sergeant Sloan added: “We are relentless in bringing those who helped cause such violence and disruption to our communities to justice and continue to be committed to ensure those responsible are held to account.

“We are identifying more people who displayed such abhorrent behaviour which damaged our communities, and would encourage anyone with information to contact us.”

The total number of people arrested for disorder in Merseyside now stands at 171, with 129 charged and 106 sentenced to a combined 208 years in prison.

We would encourage anyone with information to contact us by calling 101 or anonymously via Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Current galleries of people we would like to speak to can be found on our X and Facebook pages, and on our force website: Latest CCTV appeal in relation to summer disorder in Merseyside | Merseyside Police.

Merseyside Police

A West Yorkshire man who took part in last summer’s Hull riot will be sentenced on 7 March.

Ashley Smith, 26, admitted violent disorder and four counts of burglary at Hull Magistrates’ Court on 22 January.

On Wednesday, Smith, of Quarry Lane, Halifax, was told the sentencing date when he appeared briefly at Grimsby Crown Court.

A number of people have been given prison sentences after violence broke out following a demonstration involving anti-immigration protesters in the city centre on 3 August.

BBC News