A man has been jailed for his involvement in the violent riots that erupted at a hotel in Rotherham last summer.

Dion Wragg, aged 26, of Highstone Avenue in Barnsley, was sentenced to two years and four months in prison at Sheffield Crown Court on Monday, June 2.

He had previously pleaded guilty to a charge of violent disorder.

The incident occurred on Sunday, August 4, 2024, at the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham.

CCTV footage captured Wragg hurling debris at police officers who were stationed to protect the hotel and its occupants during what authorities described as ‘disgraceful scenes of deplorable violence.’

Following a public appeal, Wragg was identified from a released image and arrested in November 2024.

In addition to his prison term, he was issued with a Criminal Behaviour Order lasting nine years and six months.

The case is part of a wider investigation into the large-scale unrest, which has so far resulted in 110 individuals being charged.

Of those, 91 have already been sentenced, receiving a combined total of 223 years in prison.

The Star

Police said he is not due to be released until 2028 after breaching his licence conditions

A rioter who was released early from prison following the Blackpool disorder last summer has already been sent back to custody.

Josh Tickner was jailed for his role in the violent protests in the days after three young girls were killed in a knife attack in Southport. Axel Rudakubana murdered the victims at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in a “meticulously planned rampage” and was jailed for 52 years.

Tickner was among seven people stopped by neighbourhood police officers during patrols around Bonny Street, Blackpool, on May 21. It followed concerns raised by the community of ‘suspicious activity’ in the area.

The 21-year-old was found in possession of a locking knife and a quantity of drugs. He was arrested and remanded to custody where he has now received a 10-month prison sentence.

Officers said Tickner had been released early following his involvement in the disorder in Blackpool last year. He has been recalled for breaching his licence conditions and is not due to be released until 2028.

Another male was interviewed for drug offences and has been dealt with by the youth offending team.

In a statement issued this morning (May 29), Blackpool Police said: “On the 21st of May 2025, Blackpool Task force officers, alongside PCSO’s from Blackpool town centre neighbourhood team, have been conducting patrols around Bonny Street, Blackpool, when they have stopped searched 7 people in relation to suspicious activity, following concerns from the community.

“One male, Josh Tickner 21, was found in possession of a locking knife and a quantity of drugs. He was arrested and remanded to custody where he received a 10 month prison sentence.

“He had been released early following his involvement in the disorder in Blackpool last year. He has been recalled for his licence conditions and is not due to be released until 2028.

“Another male, was interviewed for drug offences, he has been dealt with via the youth offending team.”

Lancs Live

A young father was one of the troublemakers who joined in scenes of rioting in Hull city centre on a day that had cost the police at least £270,000 so far.

Steven Drinkall was seen outside a hotel where asylum seekers were being housed at the time as well as when fighting later broke out in the Jameson Street area, Hull Crown Court heard.

Drinkall, 23, of St John’s Grove, off Preston Road, east Hull, admitted an offence of violent disorder on August 3.

Cathy Kioko-Gilligan, prosecuting, said that a planned protest was organised in Hull city centre on the day of a “countrywide violent disorder” and it started between 1 and 1.30pm in the area of Queen Victoria Square and the Royal Hotel in Ferensway, where asylum seekers were living at the time.

Drinkall was seen in that area looking towards the hotel and advancing towards police. He was apparently throwing an object and talking to others. He was in Jameson Street at 3.30pm when fights broke out and he threw punches, although it was not known whether any of them landed.

Drinkall was, even though it was August, wearing a coat, with his hood up and a baseball cap underneath, in a “clear attempt” to hide his face, the court heard.

The current figure for the cost to the police of the trouble that day was £270,000 and 28 police officers had been affected and injured from assaults during the whole incident.

Drinkall had a conviction for possessing an offensive weapon, involving a road rage incident 16 days after the violent disorder. He confronted somebody who had been driving closely behind him. That person got out of his vehicle and had a baseball bat, which Drinkall matched. Drinkall had been given 80 hours’ unpaid work and 30 days’ rehabilitation by Hull magistrates in February. He had not, at the time, been charged with the city centre violent disorder.

Benjamin Donnell, mitigating, said that Drinkall seemed to have been a spectator at first in the violent disorder but he became more involved. “It was more of a reaction to what was happening with the police line,” said Mr Donnell. “He did not actually throw anything. He pretended to throw a missile. The officer would have felt threatened but nothing was actually thrown.” During the second incident in Jameson Street, Drinkall was in the second row helping to provide “strength in numbers” there.

“A fight broke out but this defendant didn’t throw the first punch,” said Mr Donnell. “He didn’t play a leading role. He later tried to break it up. He was clearly part of a much larger disorder. This was widespread at the time.

“He is remorseful for the part that he played in this violent disorder.” Unemployed Drinkall had a one-year-old son. There was a reference from his mother.

Drinkall, who was on bail, was jailed for 20 months

MSN

David France attempted to disguise himself, but was traced and arrested

A man who hurled two bricks at police officers during the rioting in Southport after the murders of three girls has been jailed.

A court heard David France put on a white face mask to disguise his appearance and also wore gloves in a bid to thwart fingerprint evidence while on St Lukes Road in the town on July 30 last year.

Jailing him for two years, Judge Simon Medland KC said he ‘lobbed two bricks at the police, who were faced by a crowd of milling thousands while doing no more than their job’. He told France, of Lever Street in Radcliffe, near Bury, he had deliberately involved himself and people were ‘utterly outraged that people behaved like that at a time like that’.

The 52 year-old, who has 43 convictions for 135 offences including affray, possessing a bladed article, theft and threatening behaviour, pleaded guilty to violent disorder.

Rebecca Smith, prosecuting, told Liverpool Crown Court that the day after the murders of Alice da Silva Aguiar, Bebe King and Elsie Dot Stancombe, the community came together for a vigil.

She said: “At the same time this defendant and others were engaging in behaviour at total odds to that vigil. The focus of the violence and disorder was the town’s mosque. A crowd started to gather outside the mosque from just after 7pm. Officers responded and formed a protective cordon. That cordon was subjected to significant violence as the mood changed. Some 50 officers were injured with police vehicles damaged.”

Ms Smith said video footage showed a police vehicle set alight. The cost to replace it was estimated at £100,000.

The prosecutor said the vehicle was looted and a riot shield and other protective equipment stolen. She added: “There was looting and considerable damage to property and the mosque. The disorder was so violent that residents were told to stay indoors and away from windows. Officers estimated that a group of about 1,000 people were involved.”

She also detailed racist chants.

The court was shown footage which captured France’s behaviour. While initially at the back of a large group surging towards the police, he later began to move forward to the frontline, facing the officers. He was seen putting on the face mask and gloves, and telling another man to follow him. He then threw a brick towards the police lines, followed by a second brick or piece of concrete, the court heard.

He was arrested at his home in March this year and answered ‘no comment’ when interviewed.

Selda Krasniqi, defending, said France had mental health problems and was being treated for ‘mixed anxiety and depressive disorder’.

“He regrets what he did and knows he should not have done it,” said the barrister. “He pleaded guilty at his first appearance.”

Manchester Evening News

A man has appeared in court after posting threatening messages with racist sentiments on social media.

Richard Britton, 31, from Wombourne in Staffordshire, pleaded guilty at Wolverhampton Crown Court on Wednesday to two charges dating back to February and March 2023.

Britton displayed anti-Islamic, racist and anti-immigration sentiments and used threatening language on his social media account, police said. He also shared images of weapons online and encouraged others to do the same.

He will be sentenced on 25 July.

He was charged with one count of publishing written material to stir up racial hatred as well as one count of publishing threatening written material intended to stir up religious or sexual orientation hatred.

Officers said they arrested Britton during a pre-planned operation on 26 April 2023.

When they searched his address, they recovered weapons, fireworks and terrorism material that matched those in his social media posts.

Det Supt Annie Miller, said: “We work hard to stop terrorism. Our absolute priority is to ensure the safety and security of the people who live, work and visit the West Midlands area.”

BBC News

Kevin Wood launched a ‘prolonged and vicious’ attack on a man, which saw him use beer cans to hit the man as he lay helpless on the ground


In a brutal and unprovoked attack, a racist man attempted to murder another by mercilessly beating him with full beer cans while repeatedly asking: “Why aren’t you dying?”

Following a heavy drinking session, Kevin Wood, 38, carried out what was described as a “prolonged and vicious” assault on a man in Wallsend, leaving his victim with severe facial injuries. During the terrifying seven-minute onslaught in which he unleashed 50 blows, Wood used beer cans as weapons against the defenceless man on the ground, whilst hurling racist invective.

Newcastle Crown Court heard the distressing evidence that the entire episode was recorded by a doorbell camera nearby, eventually being stopped when a local resident intervened. Wood, who had been aggressively berating the victim, telling him he would kill him, was eventually apprehended by the police behind a wall.

On Wednesday, Wood appeared before the court from HMP Doncaster via video link to receive his sentence for attempted murder and possession of an offensive weapon – the beer cans. He pleaded guilty to these charges stemming from the incident, which took place in the early hours of August 22 last year.

Further details revealed that Wood was living with his mother at the time and had consumed copious amounts of vodka and beer. Following the incident, his mother told authorities that her son had been in a “depressive mood” and suggested that his actions were driven by a desire to get himself incarcerated, reports Chronicle Live.

The victim was found covered in blood following the malicious encounter. In the early hours at approximately 3.15am, a violent altercation between two men prompted a police intervention. Upon arrival, officers discovered one of the men bloodied and lying on the pavement.

It was noted in court that the injured man was uncooperative with the attending officers, while Wood, drenched in the other man’s blood, was found concealed behind a small brick wall near Wallsend High Street.

Initially, Wood attempted to deceive the police by claiming he was the victim, alleging to officers ‘some d***y had tried to tax me’ – a statement later revealed in court to be an unequivocal falsehood. During his subsequent police interview, he chose to remain silent.

Jolyon Perks, leading the prosecution, revealed that doorbell cameras captured the totality of the aggressive encounter. Addressing the tribunal, he recounted: “Footage shows both men in discussion. The defendant had his hand around [the victim] preparing to strike. He asked what he thought of his brother, the victim said ‘he’s a mug’. The defendant then punched him to the ground, leaving him no opportunity to stand up.”

The hearing was informed that at the time of the initial punch, Wood was clutching a brimming beer can. The impact of the assault was so brutal that the can “exploded”. The aggression escalated as Wood seized two additional beer cans in proximity, utilising them as weapons in the assault.

According to evidence presented in court, the victim sustained roughly “50 forceful blows” to the head and visage, supplemented by Wood delivering kicks to the man’s head.

During the trial, the court was informed that the doorbell camera captured not only the visuals but also the audio of the attack. Mr Perks detailed: “The defendant told the victim he was going to die and repeatedly threatens to stab him and tells him he’s going to kill him. He says ‘you’re going to die but first I’m going to smash your face to bits…why aren’t you dying?'”.

Racist abuse was also a part of the harrowing incident, with Wood recorded hurling racial slurs at the victim, calling him “a little f***ing p*** b*****d”. The assault ceased when a neighbour intervened upon hearing the disturbance, prompting Wood to flee the scene. Upon his arrest, Wood remarked to an officer, “I hope this isn’t a race thing”.

The prosecution conveyed to the court their belief that the attempted murder was driven by racial animosity. Following the attack, the victim required medical attention at Cramlington Hospital for “complex facial injuries”, which included multiple lacerations to the lip, with one injury causing partial detachment.

The court also reviewed Wood’s criminal history, which includes 16 prior convictions spanning 23 offences. Notably, in 2018, Wood received a six-year prison sentence for rape. Additionally, while incarcerated, he broke a prison officer’s nose and later bragged about the incident.

Defence counsel Jamie Adams offered insight into Wood’s troubled past, stating: “This is a man who has been beset and blighted by an addiction to alcohol and drugs. Probably since his quite early years. It is likely to have begun a long time ago.”

The defence claimed that the altercation was not racially motivated, explaining that the two individuals involved, Wood and the victim, had a prior acquaintance rooted in their shared history of substance abuse.

Addressing the courtroom, the defence counsel, Mr Adams, said: “It became an addiction and at the time of this offending it is clear that on the night he was drinking heavily and had drank a whole bottle of vodka and cans of beer. He was not in a sober state of mind.”

“It was not an offence motivated by racism. He was a drunk Geordie man using the kind of words he was expressing. There are plenty of Geordie Pakistanis who refer to one another as p**** and d*****.”

According to Mr Adams, the racist language Wood employed during the altercation was used “in the anger of the moment” rather than driven by any intent to harm the victim due to his racial background or skin colour.

Judge Paul Sloan KC, presiding over the case, determined that Wood carried out a “prolonged and vicious attack” and utilised “racist abuse”. The judge deemed Wood to pose a “significant risk to members of the public” and subsequently sentenced him to an extended prison term of 20 years, with 15 years consisting of custodial time. Additionally, a restraining order was enforced.

Daily Record

A club customer has been jailed for slashing the throat of a Royal Marine in an attack which came ‘within a millimetre of murder’.

Wayne Tandy pulled an open Stanley knife out of his pocket during a 3am confrontation outside the Fever club in Barnstaple in June and lashed out towards the neck of victim Ben Turnbull.

The serving Royal Marine jerked backwards to avoid the blow but still suffered a cut on his neck which was very close to vital veins and arteries.

The two men were strangers but both had just left the club and were on either side of a metal barrier outside. Tandy was agitated and Mr Turnbull was telling him to calm down.

Tandy was in North Devon working as a carpet fitter and had kept the knife in his pocket despite returning to the hotel where he was staying to share a crate of beer with a workmate.

He then went to a pub and on to Fever and had been drinking for nine hours at the time of the attack. He fled the scene, checked out of his hotel, and went to sleep in his works van but was tracked by CCTV to an industrial estate.

CCTV outside the club captured the attack itself. Tandy claimed he was not the man in the footage but was clearly identified by a crucifix tattoo on his cheek.

Mr Turnbull received first aid at the scene and the wound was cleaned at hospital, but was not deep and did not need stitches or gluing.

Tandy, of Broadway, Wakefield, admitted wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and was jailed for six and a half years with a 30 month extended licence by Judge David Evans at Exeter Crown Court.

He told him: “This was a millimetre away from murder. It was a matter of pure good fortune that he moved his head backwards and there was not a greater wound than in fact resulted.

“In my judgment, you do pose a significant risk of causing harm in the future by committing offences and you are a dangerous offender.

“The readiness with which you resorted to using a Stanley knife and the deliberation with which you did so, and the way you were willing to use it against the face or throat of the victim, confirm my conclusion.”

Mr Julian Kesner, prosecuting, said both Tandy and Royal Marine Ben Turnbull were in drink when they exchanged words on either side of a metal barrier outside Fever at 3 am on June 28 this year.

He played CCTV and said: “The footage shows Tandy going into his pocket and getting a knife out. He moves forward and slashes out at Mr Turnbull, making contact with his neck.

“The action was like a haymaker and Mr Turnbull managed to move his head back but was cut. He did not appreciate he had been cut straight away.

“Tandy left the scene and clearly appreciated the seriousness of what he had done because he went to his hotel room, packed his bags and drove a short distance with the intention of evading capture. The van was tracked by CCTV and he was arrested.”

Mr Nick Lewin, defending, said Tandy was working on a carpet laying contract and had the knife in his pocket for work, rather than to use as a weapon.

He said he had only struck one blow, was aiming more for the head than the neck, and had no intention of cutting the other man’s throat.

One of his two young children died while he was in custody awaiting sentence and he was distraught at not being allowed out of jail to attend the funeral.

Devon Live

Article from 2019. He attended several EDL Demos

A Conservative councillor’s wife who was jailed for inciting racial hatred after an online rant against migrants on the day of the Southport attacks has had her appeal against her sentence dismissed.

Lucy Connolly, from Northampton, was jailed for 31 months in October after calling for “mass deportation now” and urging her followers on X to “set fire” to hotels housing asylum seekers.

The tweet was viewed 310,000 times before it was deleted.

Her husband Ray, a member of Northampton Town Council, said he was “heartbroken” that the Court of Appeal had ruled that “there is no arguable basis on which it could be said that the sentence imposed by the judge was manifestly excessive”.

Connolly posted the swearword-ridden message on 29 July 2024 – the day three girls were murdered at a dance class in Southport.

While calling for “mass deportations now”, the 41-year-old childminder wrote: “If that makes me racist, so be it.”

She urged readers to “set fire” to “all the hotels” that were “full” of those she wished to deport.

The post had been deleted before Connolly was arrested on 6 August but it had already been viewed 310,000 times.

She was jailed at Birmingham Crown Court after pleading guilty to inciting racial hatred and told that she would serve 40% of her sentence in prison before being released on licence.

Giving a written judgment, external on Tuesday, three Court of Appeal judges said Connolly’s principal ground of appeal “was substantially based on a version of events put forward by the applicant which we have rejected”.

Connolly’s husband rejected a call from a local MP for his resignation from West Northamptonshire Council, but lost his seat in this year’s local elections as Reform UK took control of the unitary authority.

He remains a member of Northampton Town Council.

After Tuesday’s appeal court decision, he issued a statement saying he was “heartbroken” his wife’s appeal had been dismissed.

“My wife has paid a very high price for making a mistake and today the court has shown her no mercy,” he added.

He went on to say that “the 284 days of separation” had been “very hard, particularly on our 12-year-old girl”.

“Lucy posted one nasty tweet when she was upset and angry about three little girls who were brutally murdered in Southport,” he said.

“She realised the tweet was wrong and deleted it within four hours.

“My wife Lucy is a good person and not a racist. As a childminder she took care of small children of African and Asian heritage; they loved Lucy as she loved them.”

BBC News

you can read the Appeals Court ruling here

A former policeman has been jailed for almost six years after counter-terrorism officers seized a haul of Nazi memorabilia and more than 100 weapons.

Andrew Campbell admitted possessing three illegal guns and a silencer that matched bullets found in searches at his home and a lock-up in Nottinghamshire.

He denied sending grossly offences messages about kidnapping and mutilating a woman he met through a different job.

Detectives say Campbell was a ‘dangerous extremist’, who changed his name after being sacked from the Nottinghamshire force in 2017.

Campbell was arrested by officers from Counter Terrorism East Midlands who searched his property at Nottingham Road in Toton in January 2024.

Det Insp Christopher Brett, who led the investigation, said they found a “treasure trove” of knives, knuckle-dusters, extendable batons, and lethal home-made guns.

DI Brett said they also seized boxes from a rented lock-up, containing weapons along with Swastikas and “disturbing” Nazi literature and memorabilia.

“We see the building blocks of someone who could well be a future risk to society”, he added.

Nottingham Crown Court heard that Campbell had many more firearms that could be considered illegal.

The prosecution said he used a “loophole” for guns that can also fire paintballs, and only admitted charges over weapons where illegal ammunition had been recovered.

Officers recovered pointed home-made steel and resin bullets, and Campbell also owned moulds for making the ammo.

The court heard he was interested “not only in their power but in their capacity to injure”.

Videos were recovered showing Campbell testing modified firearms by shooting into boxes and buckets stuffed with towels, the court heard.

Campbell’s devices contained a photo of a gun alongside a message from him saying Pro-Palestine demonstrators “need some of this”.

In another message, he insulted Muslim people and wrote “knock knock, bang bang”.

He also sent messages about owning potentially deadly firearms, saying “the government would rather you got stabbed in a home invasion”.

Campbell first made headlines after being dismissed from Nottinghamshire Police in April 2017, when he was known as Graeme Thornhill.

A gross misconduct hearing found he used excessive and disproportionate force against an erratic driver who was taking his young son to hospital.

PC Thornhill sprayed the father’s face with CS gas and struck him with a baton but denied it was a racially-motivated attack.

On Thursday, Campbell denied further charges of possessing flick or gravity knives, and sending two grossly offensive messages.

A previous court hearing was told Campbell sent two WhatsApp posts about how he would kidnap, starve and mutilate a woman he knew.

Campbell will appear before magistrates to face those charges at a later date.

Campbell, 42, denied two further offences of possessing documents useful to a terrorist. Those charges relate to manuals for making lethal weapons at home.

The prosecution agreed not to proceed with those terrorism offences, but Det Insp Brett says he posed a “really significant danger”.

“Ultimately my teams and I are focussed on making sure we stop future terrorist attacks,” he said.

“The people who move towards those attacks and complete them have trodden very similar pathways in the past so it’s really important to take people off the streets before they get to that point”.

In mitigation, Jonathan Duffy KC said Campbell no longer held these extremist views and was “ashamed”.

He said Campbell was a collector with a special interest in weapons and was autistic.

Sentencing Campbell to five years and 10 months in prison, Judge Nirmal Shant KC said his white supremacist views were “abhorrent”.

But she added he was legally entitled to hold those views and they were not reflected in the sentencing.


Det Insp Brett says the fact Campbell used to be a police officer was also a serious concern.

“It is really challenging to those of us who are police officers. Rightfully we are held and hold ourselves to a high standard,” he said.

“So there is part of me that is glad to be able to make sure we can address these individuals who have stepped away from that and brought disrespect to our profession as well.

“But also it is about that core mission of making sure we are protecting people in the future”.

BBC News

A nine-week long trial heard how the group idolised Hitler and the Nazis.

Three Nazi-worshipping extremists who believed a race war was imminent have been found guilty of planning terrorist attacks on mosques and synagogues.

A jury at Sheffield Crown Court heard how Christopher Ringrose, 34, Marco Pitzettu, 25, and Brogan Stewart, 25, were preparing to use the more than 200 weapons they had amassed, including machetes, swords, crossbows and an illegal stun gun.

Ringrose had also 3D-printed most of the components of a semi-automatic firearm at the time of his arrest and was trying to get the remaining parts.

The trio, who are not believed to have met in the real world before they appeared together in the dock of a court, were arrested when security services believed an attack was imminent after undercover officers infiltrated their online group, the court heard.

A nine-week long trial heard how the group idolised Hitler and the Nazis, shared racist slurs and glorified mass murderers.

On Wednesday, a jury rejected claims the defendants were fantasists with no intention of carrying out their threats and found Ringrose, of Cannock, Staffordshire; Pitzettu, of Mickleover, Derbyshire; and Stewart, of Tingley, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, guilty of a charge of preparing acts of terrorism and charges of collecting information likely to be useful to a person preparing or committing an act of terrorism.

Ringrose was also convicted of manufacturing a prohibited weapon.

Pitzettu pleaded guilty to obtaining an illegal stun gun at a previous hearing.

The defendants will be sentenced on July 17.

The judge, Mrs Justice Cutts, told them: “You must all expect substantial custodial sentences”.

Evening Standard