A man who helped stoke a fire outside a hotel housing asylum seekers has been jailed for nine years.

Matthew Crossland, 32, was filmed throwing planks of wood and bricks at police and the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham, on 4 August last year.

Footage later showed him adding wood to one of the fires that had been set around the building by some of the 400 anti-immigration protesters.

Crossland, of Everill Gate Lane, Wombwell, Barnsley, who pleaded guilty to violent disorder and arson with intent to endanger life, was handed one of the longest sentences in connection with the Manvers riot at Sheffield Crown Court on Friday.

A second man, Jack Knight, has been spared jail “by the skin of your teeth”.

The 21-year-old had been caught on video “taunting” officers by running a large stick along their shields and throwing missiles, including stones, at the police line.

‘Baleful upbringing’

The Recorder of Sheffield, Judge Jeremy Richardson KC, said: “You have truly endured what may be described as a hardscrabble life so far. The [pre-sentence] report makes it clear what happened to you as a youngster, and I understand.”

The details of Knight’s upbringing were not disclosed in court, but Judge Richardson described them as “baleful”.

Knight, of The Crescent, Bolton-upon-Dearne, was handed a 20-month sentence suspended for two years along with 50 sessions of rehabilitation activity and must return to court for periodic reviews by the judge.

“We all need boundaries, and the problem with your life is there haven’t been any,” Judge Richardson said.

He told him there would be no further chances, adding: “Justice, on occasion, needs to be seasoned with mercy.”

BBC News

Matthew Crossland, 32, was jailed for nine years after he fuelled a fire set outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Rotherham.

A 32-year-old man who fuelled a fire set outside a hotel housing more than 200 asylum seekers has been given a sentence which equals the longest handed down following the rioting in August 2024.

Matthew Crossland was jailed for nine years when he was sentenced at Sheffield Crown Court on Friday, South Yorkshire Police confirmed.

The force said Crossland was caught on CCTV throwing planks of wood and bricks at both the hotel and officers protecting the Holiday Inn Express, in Rotherham, on August 4 last year.

Body worn footage from officers inside the hotel captured Crossland’s abusive behaviour as he launched missiles towards police.

A spokesman said Crossland was finally captured adding wood to a fire before removing a face covering he had worn to attempt to conceal his identity.

Crossland, of Everill Gate Lane, Wombwell, Barnsley, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and arson with intent to endanger life.

More than 100 men have now been convicted for their role in the mob violence outside the hotel, which was besieged for around 12 hours.

Police officers and the hotel itself were pelted with missiles as more than 200 asylum seekers and 22 staff were trapped inside.

At one point, the rioters smashed their way into the building and a burning wheelie-bin was pushed against a fire door.

A total of 64 officers were injured in the violence along with police horses and a dog.

Two other men – Thomas Birley, 27, and Levi Fishlock, 31 – have also been jailed for nine years at Sheffield Crown Court for similar offending to Crossland in relation to the fire outside the hotel.

Evening Standard

Andrew Tait, of Sunderland, pleaded guilty to having explosive substances but said he was just wanting to experiment with them having studied chemistry at the Open University

A convicted thug was caught with a “dangerous chemistry set” and a handbook on how to make explosive devices from various substances.

Andrew Tait had collected chemicals which could be used to make improvised explosive devices and also had other “items of concern” at his family home in Sunderland.

Police went to the address on Pennywell Road, on April 26 this year, where he lives with his partner and her child, after receiving intelligence that there may be explosives at the property.

After a search of the house and an outhouse, they found 11 chemicals which could be used in combination to make an explosive device, including a litre of hydrogen peroxide. They also found fireworks, including aerial shells with fuses that were for professional use only, a spent smoke grenade, spent ammunition cartridges, a 3D printer with 3D printed knuckle dusters and laboratory equipment.

Clare Anderson, prosecuting, told Newcastle Crown Court the seized substances were examined in a forensic explosives laboratory. While individually the chemicals had legitimate uses, they could be used in combination to make a viable explosive devices, she told the court.

Various documents were also seized and Miss Anderson said: “They contained information on the manufacture of explosives, including detonators and information on switches and triggers that could be used in an IED. The documents lacked detail and extra knowledge would be required to construct an IED.”

The court heard there was a handbook detailing the chemical combinations that could be put together to make an explosive. Miss Anderson said texts were also recovered from his phone showing he had “engaged in conversation with others about far-right ideology”.

When interviewed by police, Tait admitted possessing the chemicals but said he was “pursuing legitimate education work having studied chemistry at the Open University”. He went on to give a prepared statement in which he said he had no intention of making a bomb or explosive or manufacturing anything that could be used to cause harm to anyone else.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of having an explosive substance, relating to the chemicals and fireworks, on the basis he was “interested in experimenting with them” but that he didn’t make any of the explosives or dangerous items described in the written material he was found.

He accepted holding the substances presented a risk to others and said he had bought the chemicals online, saying he had no idea it was illegal to possess them. He said the fireworks had belonged to his deceased dad.

Tait, who has eight previous convictions and was given an indefinite sentence for public protection in 2008 for wounding with intent and GBH, from which he was released in 2020, was jailed for 12 months.

Josh Normanton, defending, said there was no link between the “far right” texts and his possession of the material and said they should be disregarded. He added: “He has done something stupid. He wanted to do some experimentation and didn’t fully appreciate what he was doing was wrong.

The Chronicle

A man has pleaded guilty to attacking a member of a group of worshippers who were praying outside a mosque.

The victim was punched outside Portsmouth Jami Mosque at about 21:30 BST on Sunday, according to Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary.

Callum Mcinally, 29, pleaded guilty at Portsmouth Magistrates’ Court to assault by beating, and also faces charges of racially aggravated assault by beating, racial harassment and making threats with a blade.

The defendant, of Waverley Road in Southsea, is due to be sentenced at Portsmouth Crown Court on 3 October.

Police said the small group of men, women and children suffered verbal abuse before the attacks.

“A man from the group asked the man to leave them alone, but was then reportedly punched in the chest,” police said in a statement., external

The suspect allegedly made threats with a knife before discarding the weapon, detectives added.

No-one was seriously injured and a knife has been seized by police.

BBC News

Daniel Kirtley has become the latest person to be jailed after widespread violent disorder broke out in Sunderland last August


A man who was with a group of “thugs with a mob mentality” who clashed with police protecting a mosque has been jailed.

Daniel Kirtley attended Sunderland city centre out of “curiosity” on August 2 last year as a protest turned into a riot which brought shame on the city and left police with a bill of £1.5m.

A court heard Kirtley was identified as participating in the widespread disorder on a series of pieces of footage. This included joining a group who had headed towards a mosque.

While some people squared up to police, Kirtley could be seen standing in front of officers. Michael Bunch, prosecuting, told Newcastle Crown Court the police line tried to advance three times and officers had to push Kirtley back.

Mr Bunch said: “The first two times, he immediately returned to the his position in the line. The third time, he was pulled back by another member of the crowd.

“He could then be seen further down the road, bending down and picking up a missile which he threw towards the police line.” Kirtley, who had been drinking, said he had been with two cousins and headed to the city centre after seeing others heading that way.

Mr Bunch said: “He said he had been talking to the police when an officer used his shield to knock him to the floor. That’s not captured on the footage.

“He said he was angered by that and picked up a brick, which he threw. He said he threw it deliberately high so it didn’t hit anyone. He said he wished he hadn’t done that act.”

In an impact statement, Northumbria Police said they had submitted a claim for £1.5m to the Home Office.

Kirtley, 35, of Lyndhurst Terrace, Sunderland, who has nine previous convictions but nothing since he was a youth, pleaded guilty to violent disorder. He was jailed for 16 months.

A judge asked Mr Bunch if the police were there to protect the mosque. He said that was the intention, although it was not in the “immediate vicinity” and there was no evidence Kirtley was motivated by hostility based on religious beliefs.

He added that officers were concerned the mosque was the “direction of travel given the movement of the people towards that street”. Mr Bunch said: “It was more a matter of concern that was the ultimate aim. There’s nothing to say that this defendant had that in mind.”

Kirtley pleaded guilty to violent disorder and was jailed for 16 months. Recorder Caroline Sellars told him the disorder he joined in was “carried out by thugs with mob mentality” and said a deterrent sentence was necessary.

Jason Smith, defending, said Kirtley’s involvement was “limited”. He told the court he had been sitting with his cousins when he saw lots of people going past and attended the scene out of “curiosity”, having noticed on social media that a protest was taking place.

Mr Smith added: “He stupidly attended because he had been drinking. He is a confirmed alcoholic. He attended to see what the event was all about.

“He deeply regrets that he became involved. He has shown extreme remorse.”

Chronicle Live

A man who kicked a police officer while protesting outside a hotel housing asylum seekers has been given a suspended jail sentence.

Jimmy Hillard, 52, struck the officer with his leg outside The Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex, on Friday.

It came hours after a Court of Appeal ruling allowed migrants to continue being housed inside the building.

The carpenter, from Loughton, was sentenced to eight weeks in prison, suspended for one year, at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court after admitting assaulting an emergency worker.

He was also ordered to undertake 60 hours of unpaid work and pay the police officer £100 in compensation.

Serena Berry, prosecuting, said Hillard was outside The Bell Hotel at 21:20 BST while a police cordon was in place, and an officer asked him to move.

“This defendant didn’t move,” the prosecutor said, adding an officer then “pushed him away from the officers’ cordon, causing him to fall to the ground”.

“While on the ground he’s kicked out at [the officer],” Ms Berry said, telling the court “no injury was sustained”.

‘Difficult and hostile’

Thousands of people have attended anti-immigration protests and counter-demonstrations outside The Bell Hotel since July.

It followed an asylum seeker housed there being arrested and subsequently charged with several offences including the sexual assault of a 14-year-old girl.

Hadush Kebatu, who is from Ethiopia, denies the offences and has been on trial.

Sentencing Hillard, Judge Christopher Williams said officers had faced “very difficult and hostile” situations at times.

“There’s ongoing disorder surrounding the government’s policy on housing asylum seekers at hotels across the country,” he said.

“The Bell Hotel is at the epicentre of that.”
Protesters marching in a tight group, marshalled by a line of police officers at the front. The protesters are waving England and union jack flags. There are a handful of women and children near the front of the crowd.

Judge Williams said Hillard had been previously sentenced in 2021 for a racially aggravated offence that took place outside the same hotel.

“Given the ongoing disorder at the hotel and across the country, I’ve got to be considering punishment and deterrence,” he added, banning Hillard from the vicinity of the building for six months.

At the same court, Ross Ellis, of Orchard Croft, Harlow, was sentenced for failing to provide a specimen.

Essex Police said a car had been driven towards its officers, on the wrong side of the road, as they maintained a cordon on Friday.

Ellis, 49, was banned from driving for two years and fined £200.

Earlier on Monday, in a separate hearing at Chelmsford Crown Court, 23-year-old Charlie Land denied two offences related to events outside The Bell Hotel on 17 July.

The defendant, from Hatfield in Hertfordshire, denied violent disorder and criminally damaging a police van.

He was bailed until a hearing on 22 September.

BBC News

A man from Kilburn has been jailed for three years and six months after a Met Police investigation found he was distributing indecent images of children and communicating with young victims online.

Simon Hynes, 41, of Douglas Road, Brent, was sentenced at Harrow Crown Court on Wednesday, 30 July. He had earlier pleaded guilty to 20 offences at Southwark Crown Court on 24 April.
The charges included:

Three counts of taking indecent images of children
Three counts of distributing indecent images of children
One count of possession of extreme images
Thirteen counts of attempting to engage in sexual communications with a child

The investigation began in December 2022 when officers received reports that Hynes was in possession of indecent images. When he was arrested, police seized several devices, along with knives, a machete and an axe.

Hundreds of indecent images were recovered from his phones, along with chat logs showing that Hynes had been communicating with children as young as eight. He was also found to be encouraging children to sexually abuse their siblings.

Detective Chief Inspector Brian Kelleher, who led the investigation, said: “My thoughts are with those children and families who have been harmed by Hynes’ offending online over a number of years. We will continue working to identify and support survivors of this kind of abuse.

“The Met is working hard to pursue predators, and this sentencing is testament to the investigation team who worked diligently to build a file of evidence and ensure Hynes was not free to cause further harm to children.

“Their commitment has undoubtedly prevented further suffering, and they are a credit to the Met.”

Detective Sergeant Callum Mantell added: “The Met is prioritising violence against women and girls and this case demonstrates our commitment to tackling these offences in all forms, while ensuring those impacted are safeguarded and supported.

“We believe there may be further children impacted and urge anyone who thinks they may have been a victim of Hynes to come forward and speak to officers.”

Police are now working to identify potential victims to ensure they receive support.

Anyone affected is urged to contact police on 101, or 999 in an emergency. Reports can also be made anonymously to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Support is available from the NSPCC on 0808 800 5000 or at http://www.nspcc.org.uk.

Harrow Online

He also admitted having terrorist information relating to manifestos of those who went on to commit acts of terror.

A 15-year-old self-proclaimed “Nazi” who amassed a stash of deadly weapons as he discussed whether to “shoot up” his school has been locked up for a year-and-a-half.

The youth, from near Market Drayton in Shropshire, pleaded guilty to having a butterfly knife, a stun gun, a baton and crossbow at his home, last November.

He also admitted having terrorist information relating to manifestos of those who went on to commit acts of terror.

The court heard how the teenager, who has autism, was obsessed with mass attacks and expressed a desire to carry out his own copycat killings, as he acquired the hoard of weapons.

After police had first raided his home, he had chatted online about whether to “shoot up my school” with a modified air pistol, the court was told.

The defendant had also attempted to make “cricket bombs” without success and, while on police bail, download a manual on how to make napalm and a self-loading pistol.

Prosecutor James Bruce told the court on Friday: “It is clear (the boy’s) own words do demonstrate a motivation that is racial and ideological and steeped in far-right ideology.”

Although violence was never far from his mind, the defendant lacked the means to act on his thoughts, Mr Bruce said.

Defence barrister Dominic Thomas said the boy’s violent plans were all “fantasy” and a “kind of self care” to deal with bullying at school and isolation in the pandemic.

He said the defendant’s parents, sitting in court, had struggled to bring him up and had for years asked for help, which was not provided.

On Friday, the boy, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, was sentenced at the Old Bailey to 18 months in custody with a further year on licence.

Judge Rebecca Trowler KC told him: “You plainly had terrorist motivations both racial and ideological.

“While you have stated that you were in effect pretending to want to carry out a violent attack and that you did so to provide some kind of solace and you would never cross that line, I cannot accept that at face value.

“I am satisfied on all the evidence taken together including your own notes, messages and opinions that there was a real risk that you would carry out an attack and cause actual harm.

“However, I am not satisfied that the risk of harm was very likely. There is no evidence of you wanting to take matters any further outside of your home. Indeed you were living an isolated life and dependent on others to get about.”

West Mercia Police first visited the boy’s home early last November and found him “unkempt” and living in an annexe of his parents’ property.

A “large array of weapons” were seized, including four crossbows with bolts, six air weapons, a red Samurai sword, six knives, and a stun gun in a tactical vest bearing a far-right symbol.

An examination of his electronic devices showed he had practised with the Samurai sword and had fired one of the crossbows into a coconut.

Two days after the police raid, the defendant searched the internet for whether a crossbow could “kill a human”.

And within days, his mother bought him a crossbow “pistol” with a 50lb draw weight, the court heard.

When police returned two weeks later, officers seized new weapons, including the crossbow.

In a police interview, the youth explained his computer activity by saying he had an interest in history and had a “black sense of humour”.

He was released on bail on condition he had no unsupervised internet access and did not buy any more weapons.

It was agreed with the local authority that he would move back into his parents’ main house and he was referred to the Prevent deradicalisation programme and Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services.

But when police went back to carry out a bail check on January 22, they found him still living in the annexe and had a new internet device bought for him by his mother.

He had used it to log into chats about crossbows, so-called Islamic State beheading videos, and discussions about school shootings, the court was told.

He was subsequently remanded into Feltham Young Offenders Institution where, in March, officers found and confiscated a homemade weapon.

A further examination of his electronic devices revealed his fascination with weapons, death and killing dated back to 2023.

In a WhatsApp chat with a girl, he spoke of wanting to carry out a mass shooting and die at the end of it, saying “voices” were telling him to kill.

He said: “I wanna kill so badly, watching pathetic maggots die arouses me.”

He wrote that April 20 – Adolf Hitler’s birthday – was to be his “death day”, and said that he would “kill lots of people” with a “taser, knife, and much more”.

He named three schools including on the Isle of Wight, although there was no evidence he had ever been there.

Mr Bruce noted the “death day” the defendant identified came and went without incident.

Police also uncovered a video of the defendant displaying a crossbow and flag.

In the footage, he said: “Embarrassed ‘cus I’m a Nazi, look I’ve got my crossbow for killing Jews, ha ha, I’m a Nazi.”.

Another video showed the defendant practising thrusting a knife, saying: “It’s an illegal knife. My knife is meant for murder, I know how to use it.”

The court heard the defendant had marked his weapons with the names of infamous bombers and gunmen, as well as the words “born to kill”.

Mr Bruce said careful consideration was made by the Crown on whether to charge the defendant with preparation of terrorist acts but it was decided that would not be in the public interest.

Defence barrister Mr Thomas accepted there were “several expressions of intended violence” but said the defendant “never crossed the line” from fantasy into action.

Judge Trowler handed the defendant a three-year criminal behaviour order and imposed a 12-month parenting order to provide his mother and father with training and advice.

West Mercia Police Chief Superintendent Mo Lansdale said parents and carers should speak to children about their online activities and know what material they could be accessing.

She said: “Ultimately, I think what’s really led to this extreme behaviour is the amount of content that he’s been viewing online and what, unfortunately, he’s been able to access.

“The viewing of manifestos, school massacres, is obviously truly shocking, and unfortunately that content is ever-growing, and it’s an ever-evolving threat that we’re having to deal with.”

Evening Standard

A father and his two children who were found guilty of racial hatred offences after performing neo-Nazi songs at a gig “did not mean for their lyrics to be taken literally”, a court has heard.

Robert Talland, 59, organised a gig at the Corpus Christi Club in Leeds on September 21 2019 at which his son Stephen, 36, and his daughter Rosie, 33, performed songs that incited racial hatred.

Talland managed his children’s band, Embers of an Empire, and was a leading figure of the “Blood & Honour” neo-Nazi network which promoted their ideology through music festivals and the sale of merchandise for “white power” rock bands, counter terrorism police said.

He also ran a record label, Rampage Productions, which distributed CDs by neo-Nazi groups.

The albums encouraged right-wing terrorism with songs calling for people to “join the fight against race mixers”, to “let the blood flow” and “smash heads in”, prosecutor Thomas Williams told a sentencing hearing at Woolwich Crown Court.

Members of the audience at the 2019 gig were captured on CCTV making Nazi salutes to lyrics that said “Hope you’re ready to die”, “Won’t stop until the last one hits the floor”, and “We’ll send them back in a box”.

Mark Gadsden, defending Robert, said: “The lyrics were metaphorical and not meant to be taken literally.

“It is the case that nobody has acted on that music and go on to commit acts of violence.”

Talland and his children were all convicted of conspiracy to incite racial hatred following a nine-week trial at the same court earlier this year.

Additionally, Rosie and Stephen were convicted of inciting racial hatred.

Robert was also found guilty of one offence of possessing racially inflammatory material and two further counts of disseminating terrorist publications.

Robert, Stephen, and Rosie Talland were arrested on October 1, 2020, after a year-long investigation by officers from Counter Terrorism Policing North East.

A search of Talland’s home found hundreds of CDs distributed under his record label, as well as Blood Honour merchandise and banners “covered in neo-Nazi imagery”, the force said.

Blood & Honour was founded in 1987 by the late Ian Stuart Donaldson, frontman of the white power band Skrewdriver.

The group promotes racist, antisemitic, anti-Communist and anti-LGBT violence, and was hit with a UK asset-freezing order in January this year over suspected terror links.

Judge Andrew Lees adjourned the sentencing until September 11.

LBC

A JUDGE has jailed a man who wore a balaclava and carried a fake weapon, forcing a mosque to go into lockdown.

Police received multiple 999 calls over more than an hour on April 19 this year when Scott Hodgson was seen wandering around a park and a busy road in Halifax with what some people believed to be a gun.

Bradford Crown Court heard that Hodgson had previously claimed to have made a bomb.

The 47-year-old, of Union Street South, Halifax, is now beginning a 12-month prison sentence in HMP Leeds after a jury found him guilty after a trial of possessing an imitation firearm with intent to cause fear of violence.

Mr Recorder Alistair MacDonald KC said there were “great similarities” between the bomb hoax and the fake gun.

He said: “In both cases you wanted to cause fear and distress to other people, and you were essentially showing off by, on the one hand, suggesting that you were making bombs, and on the other hand suggesting that you had a rifle in your possession.”

The court heard that Hodgson was captured on CCTV taken from People’s Park and nearby housing with “innocuous” rods or poles which, when put together, were described by Recorder MacDonald as “very, very like a rifle”.

He added: “This was an offence committed in public places, and the degree of consternation that you caused is shown by the fact that four 999 calls were received by the police … reporting your activities.

“A call was made by a member of the public at 10.06am. The final call was made at 11.13am.

“So this spanned well over an hour.

“In addition, a call was made by a staff member at the mosque in Halifax.”

The mosque also sent out a message at 10.29am warning people of a man in the area wearing a balaclava “with a backpack and a gun”.

All mosque doors and gates were locked as a precaution. The police were called and began searching the area.

Worshippers were urged to stay indoors and to dial 999 if they saw anything suspicious.

Recorder MacDonald said: “That demonstrates to me the degree of fear and problems that you caused to the community by what you were thinking of, you said, as humorous activities.

“They weren’t. People took this very, very seriously.

“In the end, the rods constituted just imitations of a rifle, and in fact no serious harm was done to anyone as a result.”

The court heard that Hodgson’s “wide-ranging” criminal record included convictions for violence and harassment.

He was also sentenced to 18 months’ imprisonment for making the bomb hoax in February 2023.

Recorder MacDonald said there was “a real risk of public disorder” as a result of Hodgson’s actions as demonstrated by the lockdown at the mosque and community concerns.

He said the minimum sentence that he was able to impose was 12 months’ imprisonment.

Telegraph and Argus