James Fernandes branded Staffordshire Police officers ‘scum’

A former police officer is in prison – for his role in the Hanley riots. James Fernandes could be seen on the front-line during the August 3 unrest.

Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard how Fernandes tried to bowl over police with heavy-footed kicks while encouraging violence in others. At the height of the disorder, he branded the responding officers as ‘scum’.

Bodycam footage played to the court showed Fernandes – who has one previous conviction of assault – attacking police.

Prosecutor Emma Swindell asserted that ‘this was a racially-aggravated offence’, adding: “The defendant played an active role on the front-lines, encouraging disorder. He was spotted at Upper Hillchurch Street shouting ‘come on’ to other protesters while threatening police officers. He remarked: ‘It’s our country’, in one piece of footage.”

After reviewing the footage, officers quickly identified Fernandes and arrested him on August 22. When quizzed by police, he admitted kicking the officers’ shields but denied being threatening or encouraging violence. He also denied being racist.

Fernandes, of Compton Street, Hanley, pleaded guilty to one count of violent disorder – despite previously pleading not guilty.

Martin Bloor, mitigating, said: “It took some time for him to come to terms with what he’d done. He shows deep remorse for his actions. He was there with a friend but when he saw there was a protest in the area, he decided to attend. He had assumed it was a peaceful demonstration. Unfortunately, he chose to stay when things became violent.

“He had a very difficult start in life. His parents did not get on and there was often violence at home. He spent some time in the care of his grandparents and some in that of the authorities.

“He has always worked hard in full-time employment. He joined the Army but left due to health issues. He then joined the Royal Gibraltar Police. His time on the force has made him especially regretful of his actions.”

The 30-year-old was handed a 28-month prison sentence. He must serve at least 40 per cent before becoming eligible for release on licence.

Judge Richard McConaghy said: “Police who tried to maintain order as part of their lawful duty were abused and threatened by people keen to start violence. You were an active participant in that disorder. Throughout the footage, you can be heard making comments about ‘our country’ and paying tax. At one point, you made a remark about a ‘civil war’. Your motivations and intentions were quite clear. At your worst, you were involved in direct action against police officers. As a former police officer, albeit in a different jurisdiction, you should have been keenly aware of their position.”

Stoke Sentinel

Joshua Sigley, 25, appeared at Chester Crown Court

A man has been imprisoned for setting alight a school bus during the far-right disturbances that swept across the UK in 2024. Joshua Sigley, 25, of St Chads Fields, Winsford, was brought before Chester Crown Court on Friday 20 June 2025, facing charges related to several instances of arson in the town.

Sigley received a three-year sentence after admitting guilt to three counts of arson. Peter Towers, 31, of Rosemary Crescent, Winsford, is set to receive his sentence for this case at a later date, on Friday 15 August 2025. Cheshire Police were alerted to three intentional fires in Winsford on Sunday 4 August 2024, all ignited between 3pm and 11pm. The fires were reported on High Street, Queensway, and Ford Court.

Eyewitnesses who reported the fires described seeing two men, fitting the descriptions of Sigley and Towers.

The fire on High Street was sparked using rubbish piled on the ground and a green jerrycan filled with petrol. CCTV footage from a nearby petrol station showed Towers arriving on a bike, filling a green jerrycan with petrol, and paying for it,

Two men resembling Sigley and Towers were subsequently spotted attempting to ignite trees near Ford Court. Both men were arrested at a Winsford address on Sunday 4 August 2024 and later charged.

Detective Inspector Ross Hamilton said: “Sigley’s actions were incredibly dangerous, fuelled by the national disorder last summer, and could easily have ended up injuring someone, or even worse.”

He added: “I welcome the custodial sentence which has been handed to him; to target a school bus and cause £70,000 worth of damage is shocking.”

DI Hamilton further added: “The sentence handed down to Sigley should serve as a strong reminder of how serious these crimes are regarded and robust action will be taken against anyone who chooses to behave in this manner.”

Liverpool Echo

A man has been charged with racially aggravated harassment after rats were released near a mosque in Sheffield.

Police were called to Grimesthorpe Road, in Burngreave, on Monday following reports a man had stopped at the side of the road and released three rats from the boot of a vehicle near the Grand Mosque.

Edmund Fowler, 66, from Sheffield, appeared at the city’s magistrates’ court earlier charged with four counts of causing racially or religiously aggravated intentional harassment, alarm or distress.

During the hearing he indicated he would plead guilty to the charges and was remanded in custody ahead of a sentencing hearing on 16 July.

South Yorkshire Police said the charges also related to other incidents targeting those attending the Grand Mosque on 3 and 26 May as well as 7 June.

BBC News

Marcus Arduini Monzo, 37, given life sentence for killing 14-year-old, and attempted murder of three others in Hainault rampage

A man has been jailed for at least 40 years for the “wicked” murder of the schoolboy Daniel Anjorin during a 20-minute rampage in east London.

Marcus Arduini Monzo, 37, fatally slashed Daniel with a samurai sword minutes after the 14-year-old left his home in Hainault on 30 April last year.

In a televised sentencing, Mr Justice Bennathan jailed Arduini Monzo for life with a minimum term of 40 years for murder and for attacking three other members of the public and two police officers.

Earlier, Daniel’s father, Ebenezer Anjorin, condemned Arduini Monzo’s “wicked” actions and described losing his son as his “worst nightmare”.

Speaking publicly about it for the first time, Anjorin said in a statement: “On April 30 2024 at approximately 7am, Daniel left for school. At approximately 7.15am I was informed by my eldest son that Daniel had been stabbed on the road near my house. I ran outside the house and just across the road I saw a hunched-up body by the side of the road.

“I did not realise that it was Daniel at first but, as I got closer, I recognised the school sports clothes and saw his face.

“He was lying in a pool of blood and had a deep cut to his face running from the side of his mouth to the back of his neck. He was motionless. I knew at once that he was dead, but I reached down, called his name and held his head.”

After a few minutes, he said, he called Daniel’s mother, who screamed and cried when she arrived home and saw paramedics trying to resuscitate her son, who died later in hospital.

Anjorin said he could not begin to describe the “pain and anguish” the family felt at losing Daniel, who was academically gifted and enjoyed sports and music.

“We will not see him get married or have children. All the normal things parents hope for their children. All these hopes and aspirations have been cruelly snatched away from us through the wicked actions of Marcus Monzo.

“It has been the worst nightmare experience of our lives. To have to go through the pain of losing a child in such a cruel and savage way. No family should have to go through this.”

In his sentencing, Bennathan paid tribute to Anjorin’s “calm dignified” manner throughout the trial and said no sentence would “begin to temper” the grief of Daniel’s family.

He added: “All the police officers behaved with exemplary courage and put their lives on the line to protect the public they served.”

Previously, the court heard how Arduini Monzo had killed and skinned his pet cat Wizard before running amok in Hainault.

He drove his van into Donato Iwule who ran away screaming as Arduini Monzo got out of the vehicle and came at him with a sword. Arduini Monzo then attacked Daniel from behind, causing unsurvivable neck injuries.

When Constable Yasmin Mechem-Whitfield tried to detain Arduini Monzo, he repeatedly struck her with “savage” blows, causing severe injuries.

He burst into the home of Henry De Los Rios Polania and Sindy Arias, who had been asleep with their young child nearby.

Insp Moloy Campbell cornered Arduini Monzo in a car park and ran in with his baton raised but was slashed on the hand.

Officers eventually detained the delivery driver who had become psychotic from taking cannabis.

Afterwards, Arduini Monzo, who had viewed far right and misogynistic content on social media, likened events to the Hollywood film The Hunger Games and claimed to have an alternate persona of a “professional assassin”.

A jury in his Old Bailey trial found Arduini Monzo guilty of Daniel’s murder, and the attempted murder of Iwule, Arias and Mechem-Whitfield.

He was convicted of wounding De Los Rios Polania and Campbell with intent.

He was also convicted of aggravated burglary and having an article with a blade or point. He admitted possessing the samurai sword used to kill Daniel and a katana sword found in his van.

The Guardian


Three members of the same family have today (June 26) been found guilty of creating, performing and distributing neo-Nazi music which encouraged terrorism and incited racial hatred.

Robert Talland, 56, his son Stephen, 36, and daughter Rosie, 34, all from Essex, were found guilty of multiple charges of stirring up racial hatred following a nine-week trial at Woolwich Crown Court. Robert was also found guilty of two offences of encouraging terrorism.

Robert Talland was a leader of the ‘Blood & Honour’ neo-Nazi movement, which organised music festivals and sold merchandise for far right and extreme right wing rock bands. He was also a producer for the music label ‘Rampage Productions’ which distributed CDs for white power music bands. Rosie and Stephen played for the band ‘Embers of an Empire’ which Robert managed.

All three were arrested on October 1, 2020, after a year-long investigation by officers from Counter Terrorism Policing North East.

During the trial, the court heard that Robert Talland had organised a gig at the Corpus Christi Club in Leeds on September 21, 2019, at which ‘Embers of an Empire’ performed songs which called for racist violence. CCTV footage showed people at the gig making Nazi salutes.

Officers searching Robert Talland’s home found hundreds of CDs from white power bands which he was distributing under his record label, as well as Blood & Honour merchandise and banners covered in neo-Nazi imagery. When the music on the CDs was reviewed, it was found to contain lyrics which encouraged acts of extreme right wing terrorism.

Detective Chief Superintendent James Dunkerley, the Head of Counter Terrorism Policing North East, said: “Robert, Stephen and Rosie Talland were part of a network of hatred which had encouraged violence and extreme right wing terrorism across Europe for decades.

“Robert Talland dismissed the group as an ‘old man’s drinking club’, but through the gigs and events they organised, they promoted music which glorified acts of murder to audiences which included young children. In doing so, they encouraged attitudes of hatred, intolerance and violence which have no place in our society.

“The verdicts today come after a lengthy and detailed investigation into the Talland family and their activities. Counter Terrorism Policing is committed to targeting the people who encourage racist violence by bringing them to justice.

“We need the public’s help to do our work. If you hear or see anything that doesn’t feel right, trust your instincts and report it in confidence at gov.uk/ACT.”

CTU

Alfie Coleman denies preparing acts of terrorism.

A neo-Nazi teenager was snared by police and MI5 as he tried to buy a Makarov pistol for a terrorist attack, a court has heard.

Alfie Coleman was detained by armed police in a Morrisons car park moments after he paid £3,500 in exchange for what he thought was a gun and ammunition, the Old Bailey was told.

It was the culmination of a “highly sophisticated operation” in which an undercover officer from MI5 allegedly agreed to sell Coleman weaponry, jurors were told.

Former Tesco worker Coleman had allegedly engaged in online chat with several undercover officers over months as he tried to buy the gun on various encrypted messaging platforms.

Prosecutor Nicholas De La Poer KC said an arrangement was made with the undercover officer for the supply of a Makarov pistol, five magazines and 200 rounds of ammunition.

Coleman was allegedly told they would be in a Land Rover Discovery parked in the Morrisons car park in Stratford, east London. He was aged 19 at the time.

On the morning of September 29 2023, the defendant left £3,500 in cash in the front passenger seat footwell and collected the bag of items from the boot.

But before he had gone 30 yards, he was confronted by armed counter-terrorism police and arrested, the court was told.

Inside the bag he was carrying was what appeared to be a handgun and around 200 rounds of ammunition, jurors heard.

Mr De La Poer said members of the public going about their business shopping at Morrisons had witnessed the “shocking scene” as Coleman was detained by three counter-terrorism officers pointing stun guns.

He said: “There was much shouting at the young man. More men appeared and took hold of the young man who ended up on the ground.”

While planning a gun attack, the defendant had gathered terrorist information, carried out online research, and wrote a “manifesto”, jurors were told.

Mr De La Poer told jurors: “The prosecution’s case is that Mr Coleman believed in an extreme right-wing ideology which included idolising the likes of Thomas Mair, the man who murdered the MP, Jo Cox.”

He believed in the “the supremacy of white people and neo-Nazism” and collected a number of documents to help with his attack planning, the prosecutor said.

He went on: “The prosecution’s case is that Mr Coleman engaged in conversation on encrypted social media platforms such as Wire and Telegram with people whom he thought were sympathetic to his views.

“And it was through such people that Mr Coleman sought to buy firearms. A mission which led him to the Morrison’s carpark in Stratford on the morning of September 29 2023.”

The court heard how the defendant had emailed the far-right white supremacist organisation Patriotic Alternative in July 2021 saying he “would like to start participating in activism”.

In June 2022, the defendant allegedly wrote a plan for a potential terrorist attack identifying his initial target as the “Mayor of London house” and included the postcode of the Lord Mayor of London.

The note also made reference to what appeared to be a plan to put explosive in a cash machine and listed weapons including knives and crossbows, the court was told.

In the event, the plans were abandoned as his thinking developed, jurors heard.

Jurors were told of a file entitled “you can’t see me” containing another attack plan, this time to hijack a plane.

Mr De La Poer said that in the “cold light of day” this plan appeared to be “far-fetched and childish”.

He went on: “The prosecution’s case is that however he presented to the outside world when at work, Mr Coleman was seething with hatred on the inside. As a result he created a list.”

In September 2022, the defendant allegedly compiled a list of vehicle number plates on his phone, with one belonging to a colleague at Tesco labelled “race traitor”.

Jurors heard how he had singled out the white female co-worker who was married to a man of mixed Indian and Seychellois heritage.

At the time, the defendant’s reading included an extreme right-wing text which included a scene entitled “The Day of the Rope” in which “white race traitors” were hanged on a single day.

In the summer of 2023, the defendant allegedly turned his attention to an attack in France and attempted to arrange the purchase of military grade weaponry there.

In a “Diary” document, he allegedly explained he had picked France because it was close to “all out race war” and it was “where I feel most useful and where I can create the biggest impact”.

In the event, Coleman never travelled to France due to practical difficulties, jurors were told.

Two days before he was due to pick up the Makarov and ammunition in Stratford, Coleman allegedly told an online contact: “Just something has gotta be done, how long can we sit here and talk over the internet.”

The same day, Coleman ordered a Gerber Strong Arm knife with a 4.8 inch blade online, the court was told.

Jurors were told that Coleman accepted he had a significant quantity of extreme right-wing material and had pleaded guilty to possessing 10 documents which contain information likely to be useful to terrorists.

The defendant did not dispute writing a text bearing similarities to other “manifestos” written by convicted extreme right-wing terrorists nor that he engaged in chat on Telegram and Wire with people who proclaimed extreme right-wing views and idolised Hitler, jurors heard.

Coleman has also pleaded guilty to attempting to possess both a firearm and ammunition but denied he was preparing for a terrorist attack.

Mr De La Poer said the defendant would claim he did not agree with everything he read and was always changing what he thought.

The defendant had dismissed the manifesto and online chat as a “fantasy” and claimed he wanted a gun and ammunition because he thought that the breakdown of society was coming.

Coleman, now aged 21, of Great Notley in Essex, has denied preparing acts of terrorism and the trial continues.

Evening Standard

Ryan Corden has avoided jail after an Islamic leader came to his defence


A volunteer mosque worker has avoided jail for his part in supporting far-right agitators as a riot rocked Hanley. Ryan Corden’s case has been branded ‘strange’ after he acted ‘out of character’.

Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard 35-year-old Corden gives up his own time to do building work at the Town Road mosque. But on August 3 last year, he became embroiled in the anarchy that gripped the city centre, encouraging rioters as they resisted law enforcement.

Much of the unrest centred on the Town Road mosque where Corden has helped out. Now he has narrowly escaped prison after an Islamic leader came to his defence.

Prosecutor David Bennett told the court that Corden followed along with far-right protesters from 11am until 2pm, hurling abuse at officers while trying to break the police line.

He said Corden had riled fellow agitators and fuelled disorder throughout the day, adding: “He could be seen throughout the duration of the riot, often on the front line encouraging the actions of others. He was involved in four significant incidents throughout the day.

“At 11.34am, he was seen pushing others into the police line. As the group became agitated, police bodycam footage captured the defendant putting his arms behind the backs of two other men and pushing them forward in an attempt to break the police line.

“He was then seen on Broad Street as the protest group moved towards Hanley’s centre. Footage shows the defendant motioning with his arms to get other protesters to sit down in the road to block police. He did so himself for around 30 seconds, before getting up to film.

“At 1.50pm, police bodycam showed the defendant pushing into police shields in an attempt to prevent officers moving forward. Footage at 2.30pm showed the defendant hurling abuse towards officers.

The court heard police bodycam footage captured Corden shouting ‘we’re fighting for our country, you should be too’ at riot officers.

Corden was later quizzed by police on September 27, where he admitted to being the individual captured in the footage – but denied acting in a threatening manner or attempting to fuel disorder. He claimed he protested peacefully, adding he ‘stayed out of curiosity’.

The defendant, of Willowbrook Walk, Norton, went on to plead guilty to one charge of disorder.

Scott Ashdown, mitigating, said: “While his attendance may be seen as prolonged, he spent that time mostly as an onlooker. He did push others towards police, but others were behind him pushing him too. That conduct was fleeting and the police line held.

“When he was at the front, he was pushed there. He threw his hands up in the air to indicate to officers that he had no intention of causing harm. It is quite clear that the majority of his comments were either absent threats or mere observations.

“His actions should not be considered to have any racist undertones. His actions were primarily a reflection of his dissatisfaction towards police, not particular ethnic or religious groups. He is someone who is inclusive – he has actually done much volunteer work at the Town Road mosque.

“He recognises that his actions could have caused harm to those who were being subjected to prejudice. He is genuinely remorseful for his participation.”

Judge Graeme Smith handed Corden a two-year suspended sentence, along with 25 days of rehabilitation work and 240 hours of unpaid work. He was also ordered to pay £350 in damages.

Judge Smith said: “Everyone is entitled to express their opinion or to protest. That is what you say you were doing. But that does not grant the licence for disorder.

“Although you were involved, I have the reference given by Farooq Faraj of Town Road Islamic Centre. He says this was out of character for you and commends your volunteer work, which you still do. I accept you may not have acted from a place of religious hostility.

“Yours is an unusual case. In most other cases, I have not given suspended sentences due to the seriousness of the offending. But I accept your motivations were somewhat different. I have just been convinced to give you a suspended sentence, which is rare in these cases.”

Stoke Sentinel

Two 16-year-old boys have been sentenced after participating in “disgraceful” violent disorder outside a South Yorkshire hotel housing asylum seekers.

Both defendants, who cannot be named due to their age, admitted violent disorder, with one admitting a further charge of arson reckless as to whether life is endangered.

People inside the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham, “thought they were going to die at the hands of the violent, racist mob” on 4 August, Sheffield Youth Court heard.

The teenagers, who were both told by a judge they would have been jailed had they been adults, were given year-long referral orders.

The first defendant was captured on CCTV adding wood to a fire which was burning against the hotel.

Footage played to the court showed him hurl a fire extinguisher at police officers and push a metal bin towards a police line.

Clare Ford, defending, told the judge: “He wants me to assure you he isn’t racist – he happened upon the incident without knowing what it was.

“He got carried away, swept up in it, and was being encouraged by adults present.”

When district judge Tim Spruce questioned why he initially told police he wasn’t there, the boy said: “I didn’t admit to it because I was scared. Sorry.”

Judge Spruce said the boy’s actions could have resulted in “catastrophic harm and loss of life”.

“One adult charged with similar offences to you received a term of nine years,” he told the boy.

“Make no mistake, if you were an adult you would be going to jail right now.”

Further CCTV showed the second boy pushing a burning bin towards the hotel.

He was part of a crowd which “violently” rocked a police van “to the point it became completely unstable”, the judge said.

‘Won’t happen again’

He told the boy he would have faced three to five years in prison had he been older.

“You were fully engaged, chanting, making violent gestures,” the judge added.

The boy’s mother took him to a police station after seeing an appeal for suspects shared on social media.

Kevin Walker, defending, said: “He was helping his mum with the shopping before he got involved – that shows what he ordinarily does behave like.

“He didn’t appreciate [the racial element] at the time – that was not his motivation.”

The teenager told the judge: “I would like to say I am very sorry for what I’ve done.

“It’s not the real me, what happened on that day, and it won’t ever happen again.”

Judge Spruce said many of the 58 police officers who were injured had not returned to work due to the “anxiety and distress” caused by the incident.

He said: “Within that hotel there were families of migrants who had already fled trauma in their own countries, once again placed in fear, along with staff at the hotel.

“Disorder of this nature was extremely frightening for anyone close by and for people watching on the television.”

He added: “It was shameful and disgraceful, leaving communities terrified and intimidated.”

He said he accepted neither boy had overt racist views or negative views towards asylum seekers and their actions had been “isolated behaviour in a highly unique set of events”.

Referral orders can include courses about hate crime, fire safety and victim awareness, the court heard.

BBC News

A Midlands man has been jailed for more than five years after he joined an online chat supporting plans for a terrorist attack in Leeds.

Claudiu Stefan Cristea, 47, was found guilty by a jury of possessing a terrorist document following a week-long trial at Leicester Crown Court.

Cristea was arrested in February 2024 as part of an operation by officers from Counter Terrorism Policing North East.

The investigation focussed on an extreme right wing online chat group called Einsatz14, in which individuals were suspected of planning a terrorist attack against a target in West Yorkshire.

Cristea shared racist and antisemitic views on the chat.

Three others from Einsatz14 , including Brogan Stewart of Tingley, who led the group and was calling for attacks on mosques, are to be sentenced next month.

When officers searched Cristea’s home in Queens Road, Leicester, they found a copy of “The Anarchist’s Cookbook” on a bookshelf. The book provides instructions on the manufacture of explosives, weapons and drugs.

He was later charged with one offence of collecting information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism, contrary to Section 58 of the Terrorism Act 2000.

He was jailed for a total of five-and-a-half years.

Detective Chief Superintendent James Dunkerley, head of Counter Terrorism Policing North East, said: “Cristea maintained that his interest in far right ideology was purely academic, but his involvement with the Einsatz14 chat group showed that was not the case.

“He shared racist and antisemitic views in that chat group with individuals who went on to plan an extreme right wing terrorist attack.

“Extremist material, whether it be online or in books, causes harm to people in the real world.

“If you come across material which you suspect may be terrorist or extremist, ACT Early and report it so we can stop the harm it spreads.”

YEP

Two men have indicated they are guilty of offences related to major unrest outside a Rotherham hotel housing asylum seekers last summer.

Callum Bacon, 18, of Wilkinson Street, Barnsley, appeared at Sheffield Magistrates’ Court on Monday charged with violent disorder and arson.

Scott Jones, 38, of James Street, Barnsley, appeared at the same court charged with violent disorder.

Both men were released on bail and are due to appear for sentencing at Sheffield Crown Court on 30 June.

During the anti-immigration demonstrations outside the Holiday Inn in Manvers last August, more than 60 police officers were injured after missiles were thrown by a crowd.

More than 90 people have so far been convicted for their part in the rioting.

BBC News