A man charged in connection with disorder in both Liverpool and Rotherham has had the South Yorkshire element of the case against him dropped.

Christopher Clayton admitted taking part in rioting in Liverpool on 3 August but denied charges relating to the violence which broke out at a Holiday Inn Express in Manvers the following day.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) told Sheffield Crown Court as the 66-year-old was facing sentence for more serious matters in Liverpool, it would not be pursuing the other charges.

Clayton, of Wakefield, West Yorkshire, will be sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court on a date to be confirmed.

Neil Coxon, prosecuting, said Clayton had filmed himself making disparaging remarks about police officers outside the hotel in South Yorkshire, but appeared to have left the scene before the situation erupted into major mob violence.

He said the CPS had “reviewed the situation” and decided to “offer no evidence” for the Rotherham charges of violent disorder and a racially aggravated public order offence.

Dozens of men have now been sentenced at Sheffield Crown Court following the hotel riot, which saw the building, housing more than 200 asylum seekers, besieged by people trying to set it on fire.

More than 50 police officers were injured, as well as police horses and dogs, and the asylum seekers and staff trapped in the hotel feared they would be burnt alive, a previous sentencing heard.

In Merseyside the total arrests made in relation to the riots so far stands at 136, with 94 people charged and 73 sentenced to a total of 156 years and six months in prison.

BBC News

A 17-year-old boy has apologised for his actions during this summer’s rioting in Hull.

The teenager, who cannot be named, was caught on CCTV damaging a BMW car, which had three Romanian men inside, after trouble flared in the city centre on 3 August.

He was also filmed pushing a wheelie bin towards police on Jameson Street and later throwing missiles.

The boy was handed a 12-month referral order at Medway Magistrates’ Court, sitting as a youth court, on Thursday.

The court heard that unrest across the country had been fuelled by misinformation on social media that the suspect in the Southport knife attack was an illegal migrant.

It heard that the boy initially had no idea what the disorder in Hull was about, but had become caught up in it.

The boy accepted his behaviour was unacceptable and had written to the judge to express his remorse and shame, the court was told.

Passing sentence, District Judge Nelson told the teenager he accepted that he understood “the horror of those events” and the impact it had on the three men in the car and police officers.

“You were influenced by a significant degree of adult peer pressure,” the judge added.

The court also heard the defendant, who had not been in trouble before, was easily influenced.

The boy previously admitted violent disorder and racially aggravated criminal damage for his part in the unrest.

In addition to his sentence, he was ordered to pay costs of £85 with a victim surcharge of £26.

BBC News

Simon Beech faces being sent back to jail after he threw missiles at police as they city centre descended into chaos

A rioting ex-squaddie who threw missiles at police as Hanley descended into anarchy had previously tried to blow up a mosque. Simon Beech faces jail for his role in the post-Southport city centre chaos in the summer.

And it has now emerged that the former soldier previously served a 10-year prison sentence for setting fire to Hanley’s City Central Mosque in 2011 when he was aged just 23. Beech, who was serving with the 2nd Battalion, The Yorkshire Regiment at the time, hatched his blast plot after being angered by extremist Muslims burning poppies.

In one Facebook comment posted on Armistice Day, Beech, who was a member of the British National Party and the English Defence League at the time, wrote: “The time has come. We burn their place, burn the lot of them.”

Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard at the time that Beech and his friend Garreth Foster carried out their attack in the early hours of December 3 2010 when they connected a pipe to a live gas main and fed it 163ft into the first floor of the Regent Road mosque. They then lit a fire on the ground floor. But firefighters put out the fire before it took hold.

Beech – who quit the Army following his arrest – and Foster were found guilty of arson by a jury. Now 13 years after that conviction, Beech is set to be locked up again.

The court heard Beech repeatedly ignored police in Hanley on August 3 when he was asked to move back. He threw a missile at police and repeatedly challenged public order officers.

The defendant, now aged 36, of Chell Heath, will be sentenced at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on November 25 after pleading guilty to violent disorder.

A Staffordshire Police spokesman said: “We’re continuing to trawl through the evidence we have in-order to take action against those responsible for the violent disorder in Stoke-on-Trent on 3 August and Tamworth on 4 August.”

Stoke Sentinel

A man who pleaded guilty to taking part in disorder over the summer previously tried to blow up a mosque, it has emerged.

Simon Beech, 36, of Chell Heath, appeared at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on Monday after being involved in riots in Hanley on 3 August.

He is due to be sentenced on 25 November.

In December 2011 he and another man, Garreth Foster, were sentenced to 10 years in prison for deliberately setting fire to Hanley’s Regent Road mosque.

Amjid Wazir, the chairman of City Central Mosque, said Beech did not seem to have learned any lessons after his previous crime.

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

The building suffered damage put at £50,000 as a result of the fire.

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

Disorder spread across the UK during the summer partly due to false claims online about the alleged perpetrator involved in the murder of three girls in Southport in July.

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

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

“They were worried, they were nervous.”

BBC News

A teenager has been locked up after throwing rocks, stomping on a police car and insulting an officer.

Bradley Wilkinson, 18, played a “prominent” part in the riots in Bolton on August 4 this year, where widespread public disorder took place in the town centre.

Wilkinson, of Half Acre Lane, Blackrod, appeared at Bolton Crown Court to be sentenced.

Prosecuting, John Barrett told the court about the circumstances of the day, with rival groups facing off in the town centre separated by police officers, before it escalated to “disorder and violence”.

Wilkinson was caught on body worn camera footage and CCTV, being seen between the times of 1.45pm and 4.55pm.

He was seen at first “not wearing” a face covering in one of the protest groups but was afterwards seen with one on. He was also said to be “seeking confrontation with Asian males” on Bradshawgate.

CCTV footage of Wilkinson’s offending in the riots was shown in court.

At 2.06pm he threw “rocks and stones” at police and other protestors, then shortly afterwards at 2.12pm he was shown pushing an industrial bin towards officers.

Later on, at around 3.15pm, he was shown on Victoria Square with his face covered and holding two wine glasses, one of which was broken.

At 4.20pm, Wilkinson swore at a police officer in a supermarket car park before picking up a bottle and “launching it” at him.

Finally, an untimed incident took place where he climbed onto a police car and “stomped” on its roof.

Mr Barrett described the role he played in the disorder as “prominent”, to which Judge Nicholas Clarke KC replied: “He wasn’t out shopping that afternoon, was he?”

He was then arrested by police while on his way to another protest in Wigan on August 7.

Wilkinson has no previous convictions, the court heard.

He had previously pleaded guilty to violent disorder, possession of an offensive weapon and criminal damage.

Defending, Michael James said: “I can’t explain for the life of me why he was there, and he can’t either.

“He says he is not racist, one of his best teachers at school was a Mr Patel, and he would never display any racist attitudes.

“This is a young man who has suffered a troubled upbringing.”

He stressed that although Wilkinson was involved in the riots, he has not displayed “any racist or discriminatory behaviour”.

He added: “He has had difficulties in education and emotionally, those led to him doing what we would say is acting in an impulsive and irrational manner.

“He can’t explain why he behaved in this way.”

Mr James highlighted Wilkinson’s educational and behavioural issues in school and his immaturity, having been only 18 when the offence was committed.

He added that the defendant has shown “genuine remorse” and is sorry for what he did.

Judge Clarke said: “You were not there innocently or accidentally, you were there to cause very serious public disorder.”

He added: “It impacted on the harmonious living of diverse groups who normally visit the town centre.

“Members of the public had to run away or take refuge in shops, some had to close early. There was a financial loss in the centre that lingers.”

He described Wilkinson as an “active and persistent participant” in the riots and said that despite his prospect of rehabilitation, he had a “public duty” that those involved in the disorder should be punished appropriately.

He sentenced him to 16 months in custody.

Bolton News

A care worker who livestreamed a group of masked and hooded men making racist comments on TikTok after a riot in Staffordshire has been jailed for nine months.

Cameron Bell, 23, was caught on CCTV wearing her work uniform as about 20 people, many armed with planks of wood and what appeared to be lengths of metal, walked through Tamworth on the night of 4 August.

Stafford Crown Court heard Bell was not present during violence earlier the same day at the town’s Holiday Inn Express, which was set alight in the disorder.

Judge John Edwards said Bell’s comments on the livestream were abhorrent and had the “potential to fan the flames”.

Rejecting calls for a suspended sentence, he said: “Anyone involved in violent disorder must command immediate custody, with the need for deterrence being acute.”

He was shown TikTok videos, filmed by Bell, of Worthing Grove, Tamworth, after she left work and saw the armed group as she walked home.

She was heard swearing while referring to asylum seekers as “tramps”.

Bell admitted violent disorder in September and has been in custody since being arrested.

She appeared to be on the verge of tears in the dock as her lawyer, Stephen Rudge, told the court she was “on the periphery” of a group which had not confronted anyone.

Mr Rudge said: “Her involvement is to upload the TikTok footage that was not encouraging anyone to join in or extend the violence that had been seen earlier on.”

Much of the TikTok stream had been rather amateurish, Mr Rudge argued, giving a view of the cobblestones in Tamworth but showing no acts of violence.

Passing sentence, the judge told Bell members of the group – which was caught on CCTV near to a statue of Sir Robert Peel – were armed and clearly intent on further violence.

‘Fuelled by misinformation’

There were disturbances across this country after the fatal stabbing of three young girls at a dance class in Southport in late July.

“The violence was fuelled by misinformation and misplaced far-right sentiment,” the judge said.

“It spread to various towns and cities across the nation including, as we know, Tamworth.

“A hotel in Tamworth housing asylum seekers was targeted, with significant damage being caused and injuries sustained.”

He said Bell was among a group believed to have been heading towards a different hotel in the town.

BBC News

Aaran Renwick, 34, was captured on camera shouting racist abuse when trouble erupted outside the Holiday Inn in Newton Heath on July 31 this year

A man who joined an angry mob outside a hotel housing asylum seekers to hurl racist abuse during a summer of trouble has escaped prison.

Aaran Renwick, 34, was captured on camera shouting racist abuse when trouble erupted outside the Holiday Inn in Newton Heath on July 31 this year.

He joined the protest which was part of ‘widespread disorder across the country’ related to events in Southport when ‘false information spread online’ about the fatal stabbing of three children, prosecutor Kate Gaskill told Manchester Crown Court today (Monday, November 11).

The hotel was providing ‘counselling and safety’ to asylum seekers at the time but police became aware of a post on Facebook urging people to join a protest there, the court was told.

The protest attracted a ‘large number of people’ some wearing face covering and some who had been drinking, the prosecutor told the court.

When the crowd spotted asylum seekers returning to the hotel, it prompted chants from the crowd of ‘go home – get out of our country’, said Ms Gaskill.

One resident, in a victim impact statement referenced in court, told police the protest had ‘deeply’ affected him. He said he came to the country to be safe but ‘doesn’t feel safe anymore’.

The court heard the defendant, who was wearing dark clothing, was captured on footage of the protest shouting ‘f***ing P***s, P**i b******s’.

The court heard police were left ‘trying to manage’ when there was an ‘escalation’ in violence at the protest.

When police later analysed the phone of one of the protesters, who was sentenced earlier this year, officers found an exchange of messages with ‘Renners’ in which the pair appeared to laugh at attacks on Muslims, said Ms Gaskill.

The prosecutor said the defendant, who had no previous convictions, joined the protest, which included some children, and which was ‘motivated by hostility’ and he caused ‘serious alarm and distress’.

Ellen Shaw, defending, pointed to her client’s early guilty plea and said he was supported by his parents, who were watching from the public gallery. The defendant told probation staff he felt ‘deeply ashamed’.

Judge Patrick Field KC told the defendant: “You were a member of an angry crowd that gathered to protest about asylum seekers who were residing at the hotel… During the course of the incident you shouted what can only be described as racist abuse. Whatever you may think about immigration and immigration into this country or people who come from south Asia, who are a different religion perhaps or have a darker skin that you do, whatever your thoughts about all of that does not justify hurling violent, hurtful abuse of the sort you undoubtedly shouted on that occasion.”

He described the defendant’s language as ‘deeply hurtful and dehumanising’ but went on that he considered Renwick a ‘clearly intelligent man’ and ’emotionally intelligent’, and someone who could achieve some ‘understanding’ of his behaviour and rehabilitation.

Judge Field said although the offence came ‘close the custody threshold’ he was able to impose a community sentence.

Unemployed Renwick, of Derbyshire Road in Newton Heath, was handed a two-year community order after he admitted a single charge of racially aggravated disorderly behaviour intended to cause alarm, harassment of distress. He was also ordered to complete 20 rehabilitation activity requirement days and to undertake 180 hours of unpaid work.

Renwick was also placed on an electronically monitored curfew for the next six weeks, requiring him to be at home between 9pm and 6am every night. He was also ordered to pay £200 towards prosecution costs.

Manchester Evening News

A man from Stoke-on-Trent has pleaded guilty to violent disorder.

Simon Beech, 36, of Chell Heath, appeared at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on Monday following riots in the city centre on 3 August.

The disorder broke out across the UK during the summer after disinformation was spread about the alleged perpetrator involved in the murder of three girls in Southport in July.

Beech is due to be sentenced later this month.

BBC News

Harvey France was not someone who would be expected to be in a courtroom, said his lawyer. “He is a man who won’t return to the courtroom,” she said

A troublemaker who was part of the frightening scenes of public disorder in Hull city centre hurled street signs and traffic cones at police during 12 hours of “racist, hate-fuelled mob violence”.

Harvey France took part in “serious acts of violence” and it was only by pure good fortune that no police officers were hurt by the “multiple missiles” that he threw during the rowdy disturbances and racist chanting, Hull Crown Court heard.

France, 25, of Munstead Way, Welton, near Brough, admitted violent disorder on August 3.

Jennifer Gatland, prosecuting, said that France was identified from CCTV pictures as being involved in large-scale public disorder in Hull city centre.

He was among a crowd outside the Royal Hotel in Ferensway where asylum seekers were being housed at the time. Police formed a protective line outside the hotel and France was seen there at about 2pm.

He threw objects towards the police, including street signs and two traffic cones. A street sign hit one officer but he managed to deflect it away with his arm.

France went to the police on September 9 and identified himself as one of those who had been featured in a police press release. He made no comment to questions during police interview. He had no previous convictions.

Rachel Scott, mitigating, said that France was very well thought of and he was not someone who would be expected to be in a courtroom. “He is a man who won’t return to the courtroom,” said Miss Scott.

“This defendant, thankfully, didn’t cause any injury but he could so easily have done. He shows a great deal of insight into his offending, particularly into how the officers must have felt.”

France had worked in the same job for 10 years and, in that time, his boss had never had any reason to discipline him. The job would still be open to him when he was released from custody and France would “get his head down” while serving his prison sentence for his “appalling” behaviour.

France had done charity work in the past, including running in marathons and boxing matches, and he hoped to do a triathlon for charity next year. There were references for him.

Judge John Thackray KC told France: “Your offending formed part of 12 hours of racist, hate-fuelled mob violence. You threw traffic cones. Due to good fortune, none of the traffic cones actually caused any injury.

“You were seen throwing multiple objects towards police, including traffic cones and street signs. You threw a traffic cone towards a police officer, who deflected it with his arm. Only good fortune prevented injury.

“You participated in serious acts of violence. The offending was motivated by hostility based on race. Fear and distress was caused to those communities that were targeted and they were frightened to go about their daily life.

“Ultimately, only appropriate punishment can be achieved by way of an immediate custodial sentence.”

France, who had been in custody on remand, was jailed for 16 months.

Hull Daily Mail

Ashley Wilkinson, 35, went equipped with a ‘riot kit’ to the disorder in Hartlepool and Sunderland, in July and August

A Durham man has been convicted of riot at Newcastle Crown Court, after taking part in two separate incidents of disorder.

Ashley Wilkinson, 35, of James Street South, Murton, County Durham, went equipped with a ‘riot kit’ to the disorder in Hartlepool and Sunderland, in July and August.

He pleaded guilty to one charge of riot in relation to his involvement in the Sunderland rioting, and a further charge of violent disorder for his involvement in events in Hartlepool.

Wilkinson was caught on CCTV throwing a brick at police on St Marks Road during the Sunderland disorder, and was later filmed throwing a beer barrel and a fence support at police officers in Keel Square, as part of a larger group. Wilkinson was also identified as being a part of a mob who hurled missiles at police in Hartlepool.

Christopher Atkinson, Head of the Complex Casework Unit at CPS North East said: “Wilkinson played an active role in the disorder in Hartlepool and Sunderland. At each of these events, he was captured on camera carrying a distinctive black backpack on CCTV footage.

“At a further planned event in Newcastle, Wilkinson was recognised by an officer who had been involved in the policing of the Sunderland disorder. When stopped and searched, Wilkinson’s backpack was found to contain a ‘riot kit,’ comprising of fishing wire, firelighters, ball bearings, goggles and a face covering.

“It is clear that Wilkinson was not simply swept up in these events in the heat of the moment, but that he attended them with a clear intent of becoming actively involved. While it is fortunate that the planned event in Newcastle passed largely without incident, the disorder in Sunderland and Hartlepool both resulted in a number of police injuries, with significant damage caused to properties and businesses.

“The Crown Prosecution Service will continue to work alongside our criminal justice partners to ensure that anyone threatening the communities we serve is brought to justice for their actions.”

The Chronicle