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A man has admitted being involved in a fight during disorder in Nottingham.

Dominic Lane, 46, decided to join in when violence broke out during demonstrations in the city centre on 3 August.

He was among several men charged with using threatening words or behaviour with intent to cause fear or provoke violence in connection with the incident, with three others pleading guilty at earlier hearings.

Lane previously denied the charge but on Tuesday, when a trial was due to be held at Nottingham Magistrates’ Court, he admitted the offence.

The court heard Lane had “thrown a punch” before being arrested immediately after.

Graham Heathcote, defending, claimed Lane had been on the “periphery” of the incident which saw the victim, an Asian man, involved in an altercation.

“I’m suggesting to the court that the incident had already escalated into violence,” Mr Heathcote said.

‘Hurried toward fight’

He added that although Lane was “part of that” incident, it was “not targeted” and he submitted the defendant did not play a “lead role”.

Mark Fielding, prosecuting, said Lane was part of a group that “could be categorised as a far right-wing gathering, protesting, demonstrating against immigration”, and could be seen “shouting and gesticulating” before the offence.

“There’s then an incident where the right wingers were then infiltrated by a member of the other community,” he said.

“When that started, Mr Lane hurried toward that fight clearly with the intention of joining in and indeed he did join in,” Mr Fielding said.

He added “the abuse continued” after Lane’s arrest, claiming he swore at his arresting officer.

The victim, who was not involved in the proceedings, was also described in court as a “troublemaker”.

District judge Gillian Young said the offence was “serious” and happened “at a time of civil disorder and heightened tensions”.

Lane is due to be sentenced at the same court on 31 October.

BBC News

She was ‘at the front of a large group behaving in a threatening way’

A rabble-rousing grandmother who helped stir up trouble during “12 hours of racist, hate-fuelled mob violence” in Hull city centre has been jailed for two years.

Julieanne Kay was walking around with a piece of wood in her hand while large numbers of police were being confronted outside a hotel that was housing asylum seekers.

She was present when fires were started at a garage and a “baying mob” surrounded a car that had three “terrified” men inside it, Hull Crown Court heard.

Kay, 47, of Lorraine Street, Hull, admitted violent disorder on August 3.

Judge John Thackray KC said that Kay played a prominent role at the front of a group of people who were confronting police outside the Royal Hotel in Ferensway, where asylum seekers were living at the time. She made a comment about “banana boats” and she was part of racist insults that were hurled during the disturbance.

She pushed a large blue bin towards police and she was walking around holding a piece of wood. Kay was near her boyfriend, David Wilkinson, 48, of Lorraine Street, who had nunchucks with him. He was jailed for six years at a hearing in August for violent disorder, attempted arson and causing racially aggravated criminal damage.

Judge Thackray told Kay: “You were at the front of a large group behaving in a threatening way, waving and beckoning at the crowd. You tried to damage a litter bin that was screwed to the ground. You were kicking and pulling at it.”

Kay was also present when fires were set at a garage and when a BMW car was surrounded by a “baying mob” while three “terrified” occupants were inside. “You were part of that episode,” said Judge Thackray.

Rachel Scott, mitigating, said that Kay had three children and three grandchildren. “She is incredibly embarrassed to find herself here today and she is appalled by her behaviour,” said Miss Scott.

“She got carried away with all of this.” Kay was involved in some unpleasant behaviour but she claimed that she was carrying the piece of wood not as a weapon but more as a crutch.

She “mirrored” the behaviour of her boyfriend, David Wilkinson, and she became “carried away in an entirely unpleasant way” during the trouble.

“She is incredibly remorseful and incredibly embarrassed,” said Miss Scott. “She has already served three months of a prison sentence.

“A Class A drugs addiction has blighted most of her life. Her Class A drugs addiction started when she was injected with drugs by a partner. She has managed her mental health by turning to Class A drugs.”

Kay had been clean of drugs for five or six years and her most recent previous conviction was from 2009. At the time of the offence, she had split up with her boyfriend of 26 years for about four weeks. “She was struggling to come to terms with the break-up,” said Miss Scott.

Judge Thackray said that Kay’s actions were “part of 12 hours of racist, hate-fuelled mob violence” that had caused “immeasurable harm” and left a huge financial cost.

“I am not satisfied that your risk can be managed in the community or that you can be rehabilitated in the community,” said Judge Thackray. “Ultimately, only appropriate punishment can be achieved by way of an immediate custodial sentence.”

Hull Daily Mail

Harry Conway appeared not to care who saw him as he made no efforts to conceal his identity

A man who made no attempt to hide his identity when he hurled missiles at police officers has been sentenced.

Harry Conway, aged 20, of Vivian Drive, in Birkdale, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and was sentenced yesterday, Tuesday 15 October, to one year and eight months in a Youth Offender Institution.

He was sentenced for his role in violent disorder in Southport after he was identified on CCTV footage throwing missiles at officers.

Footage shows Conway involved in the appalling scenes on Tuesday 30 July and at various points he throws missiles in the direction of officers and police carriers.

He made no attempt to conceal his identity as he stood at the forefront of the group, acting aggressively towards officers and throwing various objects.

Detective Chief Inspector Tony Roberts said: “The despicable actions of those involved that day left more than 50 officers injured and Conway was heavily involved in the disorder.

“Thanks to a team of officers who trawled many hours of CCTV and social media footage, Conway was identified as part of a large group who were throwing various missiles towards officers.

“We continue to identify more people who attended the disorder in Merseyside and we will not stop until we’ve put everyone we possibly can before the courts.”We would encourage anyone with information to contact us via Public Portal Public Portal (mipp.police.uk) or anonymously via Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Liverpool Echo

Destiny Waugh walked to a petrol station to buy eggs before handing them out to youths who ‘used them as missiles’

A beauty therapy student turned up to a riot in a yellow dress and bought eggs that were handed out to teenagers and launched ‘as missiles’ towards police during violent disorder in Newton Heath.

Destiny Waugh, 19, walked to a Shell garage near to where the scenes of disorder were unfolding, on Oldham Road on July 31 this year, and bought two cartons of six eggs, Manchester Crown Court heard.

Crowds had begun gathering outside the Holiday Inn earlier that evening, which reportedly housed asylum seekers, before the situation ‘escalated’, with bottles, bricks and eggs launched at hotel grounds and police as racist slurs were also shouted, the court was told.

During the incident, a bus was also attacked, with innocent passengers forced to ‘flee to safety to behind the police lines’ Mr Gavin Howie, prosecuting, said. He said that there was ‘no evidence’ that Ms Waugh took part in those incidents specifically.

However, the court was shown CCTV images of Ms Waugh walking along Oldham Road towards a nearby Shell Garage at around 7.18pm. It is there that she was captured buying two cartons of eggs and paying with cash, before walking back to the scene holding a white carrier bag, the court heard.

“The best course of action here would have been for her to keep walking and not to return,” Mr Howie said. “She [is seen] helping herself to two cartons of six eggs. She purchases those with cash and then returns to the scene where a number of youths were gathering.

“She approaches a group of boys and hands them the eggs, which were used as missiles and launched towards police officers stood at the entrance gate. This is a classic case of aiding and abetting – delivering the ammunition into their hands.”

The court heard that Ms Waugh, ‘kept herself out of the way’ and ‘didn’t actively engage in the throwing of the eggs’. She left the scene a short time later.

The court was told how Destiny, who works part time as a cleaner and is a student in beauty therapy, told police that she had stumbled across the large group of protesters as she walked along Oldham Road that evening.

“She claimed she had no idea why the crowd were there and was not fully clued up on the Southport attacks,” Mr Howie added.

“Ms Waugh’s involvement was relatively short however her actions encouraged teenage boys to take part, in turn, providing encouragement to others for this to escalate.”

Ms Waugh handed herself in to police on September 7 after her picture was shared as part of a public appeal to identify suspects involved. She later plead guilty to the charge of violent disorder.

Defending, Ms Verity Quaite said Destiny had no previous convictions and said she had been left ‘disgusted with herself’ over her actions.

“She essentially provided the eggs, didn’t throw them herself and was there for a relatively short amount of time,” Ms Quaite said. “The court can be confident she will not appear before the courts again.

“She has shown a considerable amount of immaturity here; she has been incredibly foolish and she said she feels disgusted with herself.”

Sentencing, Judge Alan Conrad QC described Ms Waugh’s actions as ‘extremely stupid’. He said: “In July of this year, there were terrible and tragic events in Southport following which there was an outpouring on social media, including a large amount of false and inflammatory postings, leading to widespread and hate-filled incidents of violent disorder

“It is that context which makes cases such as this so serious. You purchased eggs which you passed on to youths for them to be used as missiles. There is no evidence you did anything further. After you handed them over, you left the scene. You were extremely stupid in acting as you did.

“You are 19 years of age, with no previous convictions and indeed the information I have shows you to be of positive character in terms of your studies and work ethic. You are well regarded by others and surrendered to the police when you became aware you were wanted.”

Ms Waugh, of Risbury Walk, Manchester, was sentenced to 16 months in young offenders institute, suspended for 18 months. She must complete 150 hours of unpaid work, attend 10 rehabilitation activity requirement days and pay £150 in costs.

Manchester Evening News

A plumber who threatened to take rioters to a hotel housing asylum seekers has been jailed for five months.

Robert Shortman, 49, called a hotel in Cambridge and said: “I hear you’ve got immigrants… You can see what’s happening with the riots, we’re going to come.”

It came during widespread disorder across the country in August after the deaths of three girls in Southport.

Shortman, of Stephenson Road, Longstanton, was sentenced at Peterborough Crown Court after being convicted of sending a communication threatening death or serious harm.

‘Grossly irresponsible’

The defendant pleaded guilty to sending an electronic communication with intent to cause distress or anxiety at an earlier hearing.

Judge Mark Bishop said Shortman had watched “highly filtered” videos on YouTube about the national disorder.

He stressed the call Shortman made to the hotel on 4 August was “grossly irresponsible”.

“In future, don’t listen to narrowly filtered opinions so you can understand where the truth lies,” the judge said.

Stood in the dock, Shortman nodded his head in agreement.

The defendant was “remorseful” for his actions, the court heard.

Judge Bishop imposed a criminal behaviour order, preventing Shortman from contacting or attending the hotel for five years.

BBC News

A man has been jailed for 28 months after hurling objects at officers and throwing a metal beer keg at a police vehicle during a city’s disorder.

Jack Nichols, 22, of Wells, Somerset, pleaded guilty to violent disorder for his actions on 3 August, and was sentenced at Bristol Crown Court on Tuesday.

The unrest occurred when protesters and counter protesters gathered near Castle Park in Bristol city centre.

Det Ch Insp Tom Herbert said: “Like too many people on that day, Nichols chose to behave in a way that was completely unacceptable.”

“And as many others already have, he has now received a prison sentence,” he added.

CCTV and body-worn video footage showed Nichols as part of the group in Castle Park, on Bristol Bridge and at Redcliffe Roundabout.

He is seen throwing objects towards police officers, with one hitting a police dog handler, before later throwing a metal beer keg at a police vehicle.

He is the 33rd person to be sentenced following the disorder.

BBC News

A man has been jailed after a court heard how he drove from his home in London to north Wales to have sex with a girl aged 13.

But it turned out the girl did not exist – and teenager he was grooming was in fact a police officer.

The sting by North Wales Police was described as “very professional and well organised” at Mold Crown Court, where James Shand was jailed for 21 months.

Shand – who had no previous convictions – was placed on the sex register for ten years and a ten year sexual harm prevention order was made to curb his future activities.

The court heard the defendant had booked a room at a hotel in Warrington and was on his way to pick up the girl at Rhyl when he was stopped and arrested by police on the A55.

The 30-year old of Southbrook Road, London, admitted a charge of attempting to meet up with a girl under 16 in order to commit a sexual offence.

When arrested he said “I’ve f…. up big time.”

Interviewed, he claimed he planned a day out and that while he had booked a double bed he said he did not intend any sexual contact.

When it was revealed the girl did not exist but that he had been messaging a police officer, he clapped his hands and said “well done.”

James Shand believed he was undetectable and embarked on online grooming of an individual who he believed was a thirteen year old child. Not content with his online behaviour, he then travelled from London to North Wales with the sole intention of meeting the child for sex. Those who seek to exploit the internet for such vile acts are monitored and will be prosecuted.

ITV News

From 2016, A member of Patriotic Alternative.

A teenage rioter who threw stones at police was handed in to officers by his mother, a court has heard.

The 16-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was one of hundreds of people who descended upon the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham, on 4 August.

The boy was later charged with violent disorder after throwing stones at police guarding the hotel, which housed about 200 asylum seekers at the time.

At Barnsley Youth Court on Tuesday, the teenager, who was handed a 10-month referral order, promised the judge: “I will never be here again.”

‘Wake-up call’

The court heard the boy was brought to the police station by his mother on 31 August after she recognised him in a police media appeal.

During interview, he fully admitted his involvement in the unrest and identified himself in footage.

District Judge Tim Spruce was told the boy had attended the scene because of “very regretful curiosity” and did not hold any racist views.

Sarah Myatt, for the defendant, said: “The [boy] you see on footage is not a true reflection of the [boy] who is here in court today.

“He has remorse in abundance.”

The boy’s mother told the judge the experience had been a “wake-up call” and her son now fully understood “what he stands to lose”.

Addressing Judge Spruce directly, the boy said: “I’d like to apologise. I’ve accepted that I’m in the wrong.

“This will never happen again, I will never be here again.”

The boy was handed a 10-month referral order and told to pay £250 in compensation to a police officer.

Judge Spruce told the youth: “You were a part – not a ring leader, but you were a part.

“You personally were witnessed throwing stones at police officers and by doing that you were participating in the violence and therefore indirectly encouraging others.”

BBC News

So easily has the FGC-9 given criminals, terrorists and insurgents access to deadly weapons that even owning the instructions is illegal

A gun you can make at home sounds like the stuff of science fiction, but a landmark sentencing today is a reminder that it has become a terrifying reality in the UK.

This afternoon (Monday Oct 14), a 20-year-old neo-Nazi who was at an “advanced stage” of building his own semi-automatic rifle and accompanying ammunition was jailed for six-and-a-half years.

When police arrested Jack Robinson, then 18, in February 2023, they also discovered a stash of military-style clothing, stab vests, balaclavas and German Second World War memorabilia at his home in Portsmouth.

Winchester Crown Court heard that while operating online under usernames including “kill all Jews”, the teenager had downloaded more than 500 documents containing information on explosives, weapons and 3D-printed guns, alongside a large volume of white supremacist propaganda.

Prosecutor Naomi Parsons said Robinson had been working on his rifle for months by the time he was arrested and “it was simply fortuitous that police found the gun before it had been completed and assembled”.

His case has shone a light on the growing problem of 3D-printed firearms, which threaten to enable British criminals to bypass strict gun control laws using online instructions.

And it was his weapon of choice, the FGC-9, which is beginning to pose a particular challenge for law enforcement in the UK and around the world.

Standing for F— Gun Control and the 9mm ammunition it fires, the semi-automatic rifle can be entirely manufactured at home, without commercially manufactured or regulated parts.

Now thought to be the most popular gun of its kind globally, it has sparked particular concern among authorities because of the unprecedented detail contained within its instruction manual and the availability of all necessary materials, which dramatically lowers the bar for construction compared to previous homemade firearms.

With a 3D printer, everyday materials and tools, and some metalworking skills, anyone can now make the high-powered weapon in their living room or garage, like a deadly Airfix model.

As a result, over the four years since the design was first released, the FGC-9 has spread from obscure pro-gun internet forums into the hands of criminals, terrorists and insurgents across five continents.

But its appeal is not just attributed to its practical effectiveness – the FGC-9 is also an ideological project designed by its creator to inspire people around the world to make guns in defiance of “tyrannical” governments.

While it has been especially popular in mainland Europe, the weapon has made steady inroads in Britain, too.

The Robinson case marks one of more than a dozen instances in the past four years in which British criminals and terror offenders have been charged with either trying to build the FGC-9 or possessing its instruction manual.

Several were aspiring to commit mass shootings with the weapon, while others have been seeking to manufacture it as a criminal enterprise to sell onto gangs, or apparently just building it as a hobby. The FGC-9 has become so desirable among the far-Right, in particular, that authorities now prosecute the possession and sharing of its instruction manual as a standalone terror offence.

In Robinson’s case, he pleaded guilty to attempting to manufacture a firearm, possessing prohibited parts and three counts of possessing material useful to a terrorist – including the FGC-9 manual. The court heard how the “isolated” defendant had dropped out of sixth-form college and had few friends.

Sentencing Robinson as his mother loudly sobbed in the court’s public gallery, a judge ruled that he was a dangerous offender, although he claimed he did not intend to use the gun beyond “testing” it.

“I find you were motivated by terrorism,” Mrs Justice McGowan told Robinson, as he stood impassively wearing a crisp blue shirt. “Your interest in firearms has to be viewed in connection with the mindset material found. That material found glorifies the killing of Jews.”

Robinson also admitted four other offences relating to 810 indecent images of children, which police found while examining his computer and hard drive.

The FGC-9 first emerged in March 2020 when the manual was published online by a 3D firearms printing collective called Deterrence Dispensed.

The 110-page document took readers through the process in painstaking detail, from a list of the tools needed to step-by-step diagrams and a suggested manufacturing timeline.

Dr Rajan Basra, a researcher from the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation who has studied the development of the FGC-9, says it was “groundbreaking”.

Although 3D-printed guns had been around since 2013, previous designs “weren’t reliable”, he explains. “You could maybe only fire a few shots, they could disintegrate. And the 3D-printed guns that were reliable and accurate needed off-the-shelf parts manufactured by gun companies, like the barrel.

“That is very difficult to get hold of outside of the US. So the FGC-9 was groundbreaking because it was the first time that you could have a reliable, semi-automatic, 9mm firearm that could be entirely made at home.”

But practical instruction was not all the guide provided – it was also an international call to arms. The author urged readers to build the FGC-9 as a “means to defend yourself and not be a victim to unjust firearm legislation any longer”, adding: “We together can defeat for good the infringement that is taking place on our natural-born right to bear arms, defend ourselves and rise up against tyranny at any time.”

The words were written by the FGC-9’s creator, who called himself JStark in tribute to General John Stark – a hero of the American Revolution – and adopted his slogan: “live free or die”.

The phrase was automatically etched into the side of the FGC-9 by the files released to make its 3D-printed parts, and JStark and fellow members of Deterrence Dispensed swiftly began publicising the manual across multiple online platforms.

A gun you can make at home sounds like the stuff of science fiction, but a landmark sentencing today is a reminder that it has become a terrifying reality in the UK.

This afternoon (Monday Oct 14), a 20-year-old neo-Nazi who was at an “advanced stage” of building his own semi-automatic rifle and accompanying ammunition was jailed for six-and-a-half years.

When police arrested Jack Robinson, then 18, in February 2023, they also discovered a stash of military-style clothing, stab vests, balaclavas and German Second World War memorabilia at his home in Portsmouth.

Winchester Crown Court heard that while operating online under usernames including “kill all Jews”, the teenager had downloaded more than 500 documents containing information on explosives, weapons and 3D-printed guns, alongside a large volume of white supremacist propaganda.

Prosecutor Naomi Parsons said Robinson had been working on his rifle for months by the time he was arrested and “it was simply fortuitous that police found the gun before it had been completed and assembled”.

His case has shone a light on the growing problem of 3D-printed firearms, which threaten to enable British criminals to bypass strict gun control laws using online instructions.

And it was his weapon of choice, the FGC-9, which is beginning to pose a particular challenge for law enforcement in the UK and around the world.

Standing for F— Gun Control and the 9mm ammunition it fires, the semi-automatic rifle can be entirely manufactured at home, without commercially manufactured or regulated parts.
Neo-Nazi Jack Robinson’s stash of 9mm ammunition shown in trial images released by the Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE)
Jack Robinson’s stash of 9mm ammunition shown in trial images released by the Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE) Credit: CTPSE

Now thought to be the most popular gun of its kind globally, it has sparked particular concern among authorities because of the unprecedented detail contained within its instruction manual and the availability of all necessary materials, which dramatically lowers the bar for construction compared to previous homemade firearms.

With a 3D printer, everyday materials and tools, and some metalworking skills, anyone can now make the high-powered weapon in their living room or garage, like a deadly Airfix model.

As a result, over the four years since the design was first released, the FGC-9 has spread from obscure pro-gun internet forums into the hands of criminals, terrorists and insurgents across five continents.

But its appeal is not just attributed to its practical effectiveness – the FGC-9 is also an ideological project designed by its creator to inspire people around the world to make guns in defiance of “tyrannical” governments.
3D Printed FGC-9
The 3D Printed FGC-9 (F*ck Gun Control 9MM) gun can be made using everyday materials and tools Credit: Alamy

While it has been especially popular in mainland Europe, the weapon has made steady inroads in Britain, too.

The Robinson case marks one of more than a dozen instances in the past four years in which British criminals and terror offenders have been charged with either trying to build the FGC-9 or possessing its instruction manual.

Several were aspiring to commit mass shootings with the weapon, while others have been seeking to manufacture it as a criminal enterprise to sell onto gangs, or apparently just building it as a hobby. The FGC-9 has become so desirable among the far-Right, in particular, that authorities now prosecute the possession and sharing of its instruction manual as a standalone terror offence.

In Robinson’s case, he pleaded guilty to attempting to manufacture a firearm, possessing prohibited parts and three counts of possessing material useful to a terrorist – including the FGC-9 manual. The court heard how the “isolated” defendant had dropped out of sixth-form college and had few friends.

Sentencing Robinson as his mother loudly sobbed in the court’s public gallery, a judge ruled that he was a dangerous offender, although he claimed he did not intend to use the gun beyond “testing” it.

“I find you were motivated by terrorism,” Mrs Justice McGowan told Robinson, as he stood impassively wearing a crisp blue shirt. “Your interest in firearms has to be viewed in connection with the mindset material found. That material found glorifies the killing of Jews.”

Robinson also admitted four other offences relating to 810 indecent images of children, which police found while examining his computer and hard drive.
Jack Robinson, now 20, got to the ‘advanced stages’ of building a semi-automatic rifle
Jack Robinson, now 20, got to the ‘advanced stages’ of building a semi-automatic rifle

The FGC-9 first emerged in March 2020 when the manual was published online by a 3D firearms printing collective called Deterrence Dispensed.

The 110-page document took readers through the process in painstaking detail, from a list of the tools needed to step-by-step diagrams and a suggested manufacturing timeline.

Dr Rajan Basra, a researcher from the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation who has studied the development of the FGC-9, says it was “groundbreaking”.

Although 3D-printed guns had been around since 2013, previous designs “weren’t reliable”, he explains. “You could maybe only fire a few shots, they could disintegrate. And the 3D-printed guns that were reliable and accurate needed off-the-shelf parts manufactured by gun companies, like the barrel.

“That is very difficult to get hold of outside of the US. So the FGC-9 was groundbreaking because it was the first time that you could have a reliable, semi-automatic, 9mm firearm that could be entirely made at home.”

But practical instruction was not all the guide provided – it was also an international call to arms. The author urged readers to build the FGC-9 as a “means to defend yourself and not be a victim to unjust firearm legislation any longer”, adding: “We together can defeat for good the infringement that is taking place on our natural-born right to bear arms, defend ourselves and rise up against tyranny at any time.”

The words were written by the FGC-9’s creator, who called himself JStark in tribute to General John Stark – a hero of the American Revolution – and adopted his slogan: “live free or die”.

The phrase was automatically etched into the side of the FGC-9 by the files released to make its 3D-printed parts, and JStark and fellow members of Deterrence Dispensed swiftly began publicising the manual across multiple online platforms.
JStark
JStark, who established an influential network of 3D-printed gun designers, pictured in 2020 Credit: Jacob Duygu

It took just eight months for it to emerge in a criminal case in Britain, when police found a teenage neo-Nazi called Matthew Cronjager had downloaded the manual as part of a terror plot.

He was attempting to recruit and arm a militia for coordinated attacks on targets including the UK government, Jews, gay people, Muslims and ethnic minorities, but was caught after unknowingly trying to pay an undercover police officer to manufacture the FGC-9.

At least 11 criminal cases involving people who downloaded the manual or attempted to make the gun have followed – five charged under terrorism laws, two under the Firearms Act and four as a mixture of both.

The cases indicate that the FGC-9 is particularly attractive to neo-Nazis and anti-government extremists, but the first known case of a jihadist downloading its manual emerged this month. Abdiwahid Abdulkadir Mohamed, a 32-year-old Londoner, was convicted of six terror offences for possessing the document and instructions for other homemade firearms.

Kingston Crown Court heard that he had obtained them from a channel on the encrypted Telegram messaging app, which was run by a prominent Slovakian neo-Nazi.

Mohamed’s own ideological sympathies lay in a very different direction, with records of his online activity showing him consuming material associated with Isis and al-Qaeda.

Prosecutor Martin Hackett said Mohamed had a “radical Islamic mindset” which was “directly related to the gathering of the 3D-printed firearm material”. Mohamed denied possessing material “useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism” but was convicted of all six counts and will be sentenced in December.

Terror offenders are just one of several groups showing interest in the FGC-9, which has spread to at least 15 countries including Myanmar, where it is being used by anti-government groups fighting in the ongoing civil war.

Organised criminals in nations with strict gun control laws have meanwhile started manufacturing the weapon at a small scale, with a makeshift factory being busted in Spain in April 2021.

A year later, Australian police seized a complete weapon and homemade silencer in Perth, while in June 2023, an attempted assassination by a Marseilles drug gang was carried out with an FGC-9.

In August 2022, police arrested two men who were making the gun at home for criminal gangs, in the first case of its kind seen in the UK.

Because of the difficulty obtaining firearms in Britain, criminals have long resorted to adapting or attempting to make weapons. There has recently been a spike of criminals trying to adapt toy or imitation firearms for real use. But there are concerns that the increasing accessibility and falling price of 3D-printers, combined with the FGC-9’s detailed instruction manual, could make such attempts easier and cheaper.

The National Crime Agency says that although the weapon accounts for a “very small proportion of firearms cases overall”, illicit interest is growing.

“The NCA recognises the recent improvements in technology around 3D printing, the availability of online blueprints and advice, and is working closely with partners to mitigate this threat and suppress the availability of such weapons in the UK market,” a spokesman for the agency tells the Telegraph.

“Successful manufacture of such a weapon takes a high degree of skill and expertise, and in 2023 only five complete weapons were seized, of which only one was confirmed to be viable, out of a total of 25 cases.”

Some of those making the FGC-9, including a forklift driver found manufacturing the gun at his Birmingham home in 2020, have no discernible ideology or ambition to fire the weapon.

A gun you can make at home sounds like the stuff of science fiction, but a landmark sentencing today is a reminder that it has become a terrifying reality in the UK.

This afternoon (Monday Oct 14), a 20-year-old neo-Nazi who was at an “advanced stage” of building his own semi-automatic rifle and accompanying ammunition was jailed for six-and-a-half years.

When police arrested Jack Robinson, then 18, in February 2023, they also discovered a stash of military-style clothing, stab vests, balaclavas and German Second World War memorabilia at his home in Portsmouth.

Winchester Crown Court heard that while operating online under usernames including “kill all Jews”, the teenager had downloaded more than 500 documents containing information on explosives, weapons and 3D-printed guns, alongside a large volume of white supremacist propaganda.

Prosecutor Naomi Parsons said Robinson had been working on his rifle for months by the time he was arrested and “it was simply fortuitous that police found the gun before it had been completed and assembled”.

His case has shone a light on the growing problem of 3D-printed firearms, which threaten to enable British criminals to bypass strict gun control laws using online instructions.

And it was his weapon of choice, the FGC-9, which is beginning to pose a particular challenge for law enforcement in the UK and around the world.

Standing for F— Gun Control and the 9mm ammunition it fires, the semi-automatic rifle can be entirely manufactured at home, without commercially manufactured or regulated parts.
Neo-Nazi Jack Robinson’s stash of 9mm ammunition shown in trial images released by the Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE)
Jack Robinson’s stash of 9mm ammunition shown in trial images released by the Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE) Credit: CTPSE

Now thought to be the most popular gun of its kind globally, it has sparked particular concern among authorities because of the unprecedented detail contained within its instruction manual and the availability of all necessary materials, which dramatically lowers the bar for construction compared to previous homemade firearms.

With a 3D printer, everyday materials and tools, and some metalworking skills, anyone can now make the high-powered weapon in their living room or garage, like a deadly Airfix model.

As a result, over the four years since the design was first released, the FGC-9 has spread from obscure pro-gun internet forums into the hands of criminals, terrorists and insurgents across five continents.

But its appeal is not just attributed to its practical effectiveness – the FGC-9 is also an ideological project designed by its creator to inspire people around the world to make guns in defiance of “tyrannical” governments.
3D Printed FGC-9
The 3D Printed FGC-9 (F*ck Gun Control 9MM) gun can be made using everyday materials and tools Credit: Alamy

While it has been especially popular in mainland Europe, the weapon has made steady inroads in Britain, too.

The Robinson case marks one of more than a dozen instances in the past four years in which British criminals and terror offenders have been charged with either trying to build the FGC-9 or possessing its instruction manual.

Several were aspiring to commit mass shootings with the weapon, while others have been seeking to manufacture it as a criminal enterprise to sell onto gangs, or apparently just building it as a hobby. The FGC-9 has become so desirable among the far-Right, in particular, that authorities now prosecute the possession and sharing of its instruction manual as a standalone terror offence.

In Robinson’s case, he pleaded guilty to attempting to manufacture a firearm, possessing prohibited parts and three counts of possessing material useful to a terrorist – including the FGC-9 manual. The court heard how the “isolated” defendant had dropped out of sixth-form college and had few friends.

Sentencing Robinson as his mother loudly sobbed in the court’s public gallery, a judge ruled that he was a dangerous offender, although he claimed he did not intend to use the gun beyond “testing” it.

“I find you were motivated by terrorism,” Mrs Justice McGowan told Robinson, as he stood impassively wearing a crisp blue shirt. “Your interest in firearms has to be viewed in connection with the mindset material found. That material found glorifies the killing of Jews.”

Robinson also admitted four other offences relating to 810 indecent images of children, which police found while examining his computer and hard drive.
Jack Robinson, now 20, got to the ‘advanced stages’ of building a semi-automatic rifle
Jack Robinson, now 20, got to the ‘advanced stages’ of building a semi-automatic rifle

The FGC-9 first emerged in March 2020 when the manual was published online by a 3D firearms printing collective called Deterrence Dispensed.

The 110-page document took readers through the process in painstaking detail, from a list of the tools needed to step-by-step diagrams and a suggested manufacturing timeline.

Dr Rajan Basra, a researcher from the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation who has studied the development of the FGC-9, says it was “groundbreaking”.

Although 3D-printed guns had been around since 2013, previous designs “weren’t reliable”, he explains. “You could maybe only fire a few shots, they could disintegrate. And the 3D-printed guns that were reliable and accurate needed off-the-shelf parts manufactured by gun companies, like the barrel.

“That is very difficult to get hold of outside of the US. So the FGC-9 was groundbreaking because it was the first time that you could have a reliable, semi-automatic, 9mm firearm that could be entirely made at home.”

But practical instruction was not all the guide provided – it was also an international call to arms. The author urged readers to build the FGC-9 as a “means to defend yourself and not be a victim to unjust firearm legislation any longer”, adding: “We together can defeat for good the infringement that is taking place on our natural-born right to bear arms, defend ourselves and rise up against tyranny at any time.”

The words were written by the FGC-9’s creator, who called himself JStark in tribute to General John Stark – a hero of the American Revolution – and adopted his slogan: “live free or die”.

The phrase was automatically etched into the side of the FGC-9 by the files released to make its 3D-printed parts, and JStark and fellow members of Deterrence Dispensed swiftly began publicising the manual across multiple online platforms.
JStark
JStark, who established an influential network of 3D-printed gun designers, pictured in 2020 Credit: Jacob Duygu

It took just eight months for it to emerge in a criminal case in Britain, when police found a teenage neo-Nazi called Matthew Cronjager had downloaded the manual as part of a terror plot.

He was attempting to recruit and arm a militia for coordinated attacks on targets including the UK government, Jews, gay people, Muslims and ethnic minorities, but was caught after unknowingly trying to pay an undercover police officer to manufacture the FGC-9.

At least 11 criminal cases involving people who downloaded the manual or attempted to make the gun have followed – five charged under terrorism laws, two under the Firearms Act and four as a mixture of both.

The cases indicate that the FGC-9 is particularly attractive to neo-Nazis and anti-government extremists, but the first known case of a jihadist downloading its manual emerged this month. Abdiwahid Abdulkadir Mohamed, a 32-year-old Londoner, was convicted of six terror offences for possessing the document and instructions for other homemade firearms.

Kingston Crown Court heard that he had obtained them from a channel on the encrypted Telegram messaging app, which was run by a prominent Slovakian neo-Nazi.

Mohamed’s own ideological sympathies lay in a very different direction, with records of his online activity showing him consuming material associated with Isis and al-Qaeda.

Prosecutor Martin Hackett said Mohamed had a “radical Islamic mindset” which was “directly related to the gathering of the 3D-printed firearm material”. Mohamed denied possessing material “useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism” but was convicted of all six counts and will be sentenced in December.

Terror offenders are just one of several groups showing interest in the FGC-9, which has spread to at least 15 countries including Myanmar, where it is being used by anti-government groups fighting in the ongoing civil war.

Organised criminals in nations with strict gun control laws have meanwhile started manufacturing the weapon at a small scale, with a makeshift factory being busted in Spain in April 2021.

A year later, Australian police seized a complete weapon and homemade silencer in Perth, while in June 2023, an attempted assassination by a Marseilles drug gang was carried out with an FGC-9.

In August 2022, police arrested two men who were making the gun at home for criminal gangs, in the first case of its kind seen in the UK.

Because of the difficulty obtaining firearms in Britain, criminals have long resorted to adapting or attempting to make weapons. There has recently been a spike of criminals trying to adapt toy or imitation firearms for real use. But there are concerns that the increasing accessibility and falling price of 3D-printers, combined with the FGC-9’s detailed instruction manual, could make such attempts easier and cheaper.

The National Crime Agency says that although the weapon accounts for a “very small proportion of firearms cases overall”, illicit interest is growing.

“The NCA recognises the recent improvements in technology around 3D printing, the availability of online blueprints and advice, and is working closely with partners to mitigate this threat and suppress the availability of such weapons in the UK market,” a spokesman for the agency tells the Telegraph.

“Successful manufacture of such a weapon takes a high degree of skill and expertise, and in 2023 only five complete weapons were seized, of which only one was confirmed to be viable, out of a total of 25 cases.”

Some of those making the FGC-9, including a forklift driver found manufacturing the gun at his Birmingham home in 2020, have no discernible ideology or ambition to fire the weapon.
FGC-9
There are concerns that the accessibility of 3D-printers combined with the FGC-9’s detailed instruction manual will lead to more cases of at-home gun making in Britain Credit: Alamy

“People can get involved in making the gun because they’re just looking to experiment,” Dr Basra says. “But with time, they become more familiar with the ideology behind the FGC-9 and may come to adopt that worldview. It is ingrained in that design – by the name alone, and having on the side of the gun as its design the words: live free or die.”

The slogan was absent from an updated version of the design, the FGC-9 MKII, which was released online in April 2021, but soon events would unfold that would broadcast its designer’s vision to the world.

JStark, who was identified by Dr Basra as a German national of Kurdish origin named Jacob Duygu, was arrested by police in June 2021. Two days later, he was found dead in a car parked outside his parents’ home in Hannover, at the age of 28.

An official autopsy ruled out “foul play or suicide” but failed to determine the cause of his death, triggering a wave of rage and conspiracy theories when the news reached the 3D-printed gun community.

“JStark’s death made him a martyr within the movement,” Dr Basra says. “He was seen as an example of someone who was really willing to risk his life, risk imprisonment, for the sake of everyone worldwide having access to DIY guns. I think that inspired just as many, if not more, people in death as it did when he was alive.”

Dr Basra’s s research uncovered not just JStark’s true identity, but his carefully hidden political sympathies and mental health issues. Duygu was an incel, standing for involuntary celibate, an online subculture in which men bemoan their inability to find a sexual partner, often resorting to extreme misogyny as a consequence. He had considered moving to the Philippines in the belief it would help him get a girlfriend. Dyugu was depressed and frequently talked of suicide, while identifying himself as autistic.

The sad reality was far from the image of a Second Amendment-loving hero he projected as JStark online, where he was lionised after appearing in a 2020 documentary wearing a black balaclava and military-style clothing while unloading an FGC-9 in a forest.

“I have a responsibility to make sure everybody has the option to be able to get a gun,” he stated, with his voice electronically modified into a deep crackle. “The way they use it is up to them.”

Conspiracy theories sparked by Duygu’s death turbocharged his narrative of state “tyranny”, with supporters vowing to make the FGC-9 in his memory, while news coverage of his death brought the weapon to international attention.

Interpol, the international law enforcement body, believes it is now the world’s most popular 3D-printed weapon, and it has inspired several adaptations. They include an FGC-type weapon photographed being brandished by members of Real IRA splinter group Óglaigh na hÉireann at a 2022 Easter parade in Belfast.

Dr Basra says the gun has now “taken off” and is spreading so rapidly that authorities must consider “concrete steps to reduce the prevalence of these designs and tackle people that are trying to make these guns in the UK”.

Possession of the FGC-9’s manual is now being charged as a terror offence in Britain, but success requires prosecutors to prove an ideological mindset that those possessing the instructions for purely criminal purposes are unlikely to have.

Without that, those seeking to make the gun can only be prosecuted if they have already made component parts that breach the Firearms Act 1968.

The FGC-9 case is an example of how traditional regulation has failed to keep pace with modern technology. Plans and manuals can be freely distributed online, and 3D-printers, which use an additive process to produce 3D models, have enabled production processes once associated with factories to be carried out in our homes.

In theory, this was a boon for those keen to develop prototypes capable of improving our day-to-day lives, but it was not long before people adapted the technology to more dubious ends. The first 3D-printed gun emerged in 2013. Called The Liberator, it was the brainchild of Cody Wilson, an American pro-firearms activist. Since then, there have been countless models. In 2021, a Florida gun range held a competition for 3D-printed weapons.
JStark’s FGC-9

In November 2023, the Conservative government brought forward laws which would have made possessing 3D-printed gun manuals an offence as “articles for use in serious crime”, but the Criminal Justice Bill did not finish its passage through parliament before the general election was called.

Talking to the Telegraph, a Home Office spokesman says the Government is committed to pursuing the legislation. “A 3D printed firearm is subject to the law in the same way as any other firearm. The maximum penalty for possessing a prohibited weapon is ten years imprisonment, with a minimum penalty of five years.”

“We will introduce new laws to criminalise owning with the intention to be used for crime, supplying and offering to supply templates or manuals for 3D printed firearms components.”

Authorities hope that the threat from the FGC-9, in particular, will be suppressed by the difficulty of obtaining the 9mm ammunition it fires. Although one of the weapon’s co-designers has released a manual for homemade bullets, which was used by Robinson, the level of complexity involved is significant.

Still, Dr Basra warns that the FGC-9 manual remains “shockingly available” online, alongside countless social media posts and videos showing how to create it and advertising the design. “There’s limits to what authorities can do,” he warns. “This gun is designed to be made by anyone without being detected.”

Robinson will not be making any more weapons at home for a while. But as 3D printers become cheaper and more ubiquitous, you can be sure he will not be the last person to try.

Daily Telegraph

A man has admitted setting fire to a wheelie bin, hurling missiles at a mosque and looting a convenience store during rioting in Southport.

Jason Burns, from Crosby, Merseyside, admitted violent disorder and burglary during the disturbance in the town on 30 July.

Burns, who was described as “playing a leading role”, was seen throwing objects at Southport Islamic Society mosque on Sussex Road before attempting to destroy a wall outside the building with a large group of rioters.

He was scheduled appear before Liverpool Crown Court for sentencing on Friday.

Liverpool magistrates heard he had had his 18th birthday just two weeks before the disorder.

Videos circulated on social media also showed him throwing bricks at a car windscreen, setting a wheelie bin on fire, throwing bottles at police and pushing a car with a group towards police officers with riot shields.

After the crowd had dispersed from the mosque, Burns was then seen stealing items from the Windsor Mini Mart on Windsor Road, including bottles of alcohol.

About 1,000 people had gathered close to the mosque from about 19:00 BST, with large sections of the crowd engaging in anti-Muslim chants.

Police were then attacked as they formed a protective cordon around the building, and by 21:30 BST, 50 officers had been injured and damage costing £100,000 had been caused when a police vehicle was set alight.

In total – 129 people were arrested in connection with disorder in Merseyside over the summer, with 92 charged and 67 sentenced to a combined 145 years in prison.

The violence broke out in towns and cities around England following the Southport stabbings in which three young girls died.

BBC News