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They were all put behind bars

A builder, market worker and war veterans were among those who were jailed this year for their roles in the Hanley riots. Trouble erupted on Saturday, August 3 as the city centre was swamped with protesters marching down the streets.

Around 100 police with riot shields and dog units responded to the chaos. Planned protests kicked off at around 11.30am.

Large groups of men were seen turning out around the mosques in opposition to the demonstrators. From around 1.30pm, the groups began to clash, primarily at first around the Darul Falah mosque in Town Road.

Among both the protestors and those who had turned out at the mosques to oppose them, individuals were witnessed to be carrying weapons. Scores of people have been arrested in connection with the riots and the police investigation continues.

Any witnesses to the Hanley riots can call the police on 101 or Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555111.

Here’s a round-up of some of those who have been jailed:

Ciaran Lockett and Deana Evans

Ciaran Lockett and Deana Evans

‘Chanting’ couple Ciaran Lockett and Deana Evans became the first to be jailed for their parts in the Hanley riots. Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard Lockett chanted songs, took part in a sit-down protest, stopped a police van driving through the city centre, and threw a bottle at police.

The 34-year-old scaffolder, of Fletcher Bank, Newcastle, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and was jailed for 32 months. Partner Evans filmed the incident, shouted and chanted. The 32-year-old warehouse worker, of Poplar Court, Newcastle, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and assaulting an emergency worker and was jailed for 20 months.

Ashley Morris

Ashley Morris

A dad-of-three left needing six stitches after being bashed over the head in a Hanley riots hammer attack was jailed. Ashley Morris also suffered a broken nose as violence erupted on the streets of Hanley.

Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard the 31-year-old was bare-chested because he had taken his shirt off to use it as a bandage for an injured woman. But Morris – who has lost his job as a groundworker following the troubles – pleaded guilty to violent disorder after throwing a brick towards St John’s Church which Islamic leaders want to convert into a Mosque. He was jailed for two-and-a-half years.

Andrew Townley

Andrew Townley, aged 45, of Hanley

Bungling builder Andrew Townley was easily identified at the Hanley riots – with his work’s phone number on the back of his hi-vis jacket. Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard the 45-year-old had no intention of going to the riots – and was instead trying to get to his mum’s home on the opposite side of the police cordon.

But he was arrested at work more than a month later after trying to break through the police line. He had told police ‘you have got no chance against me, no chance, any of you’ before disappearing back into the crowd.

Townley, of Penarth Grove, Hanley, was jailed for 34 months after admitting violent disorder following the August 3 trouble. He was also handed an eight-month prison sentence for assaulting an emergency worker which will run concurrently.

Lee Whitby

Lee Whitby, who once served the UK in the armed forces, was sentenced to 24 months imprisonment for violent disorder after participating in the Hanley riot on August 3 2024.

Iraq veteran Lee Whitby was at the ‘forefront’ of the Hanley riots. Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard the 41-year-old was caught on camera near Salahuddin Mosque, on Town Road, as well as at the front of police lines outside Hanley Library and in Shelton during the August 3 troubles.

Whitby – who had 42 previous offences on his record – was jailed for 26 months after admitting violent disorder. Tours of Kosovo and Iraq have left him with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the court was told.

Marcus Ramsden

Marcus Ramsden

A dad who took part in the Hanley riots will miss his son’s first birthday after being locked up for two years for spitting at police. Marcus Ramsden was invited to the Hanley riots by friends and family.

CCTV footage captured the 22-year-old – from Latebrook Close, in Goldenhill – shouting, swearing and spitting at police officers on Town Road. Ramsden pleaded guilty to violent disorder and two counts of assaulting an emergency worker.

Ryan Perry

Ryan Perry, 23, was sentenced to 22 months imprisonment after pleading guilty to violent disorder and assaulting two police officers during the Hanley riots on Saturday August 3 this year.
Ryan Perry, 23, was sentenced to 22 months imprisonment after pleading guilty to violent disorder and assaulting two police officers during the Hanley riots on Saturday August 3 this year. (Image: Staffordshire Police)

A 23-year-old man who has worked in Hanley Market for 12 years was locked up – after ‘stumbling across’ the city centre riots ‘by chance’. Ryan Perry was on a Saturday off when he dropped his girlfriend off in Hanley and went to the shops and a pub.

But he later joined the Hanley riots, struck police officers’ shields, and made an obscene gesture to a group outside Salahuddin Mosque, on Town Road. Perry, of Mount Street, Hanley, was jailed for 22 months for violent disorder and assaulting two police officers.

Dominic Cartwright

Dominic Cartwright, 34, was sentenced to 28 months imprisonment for violent disorder during the Hanley riots which took place on Saturday August 3 2024.
Dominic Cartwright, 34, was sentenced to 28 months imprisonment for violent disorder during the Hanley riots which took place on Saturday August 3 2024. (Image: Staffordshire Police)

Dad Dominic Cartwright hurled missiles towards a mosque and was up for a fight at the ‘forefront’ of the Hanley riots. The 34-year-old says he had only gone to Hanley after finishing his night shift to have a drink in Wetherspoons and watch Stoke City.

But he instead endured the ‘worst day of his life’ after becoming caught up in the August 3 riots. Cartwright, of Shawport Avenue, Bradwell, was jailed for 28 months after admitting violent disorder.

Joseph Pointon

Joseph Pointon

A first-time buyer who went to Hanley to arrange a mortgage for a house became involved in ugly scenes of violent disorder. Joseph Pointon, aged 23, allowed his curiosity to get the better of him when he saw a group being aggressive towards police in Hanley on Saturday, August 3.

He ripped off a plastic drainpipe and launched it at police. He dismantled parts of a roundabout at Town Road and threw a brick which connected with an officer’s riot shield.

Pointon was jailed for 28 months at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court. Prosecutor Dylan Wagg said Pointon was seen in Cannon Place with others being stopped by the police cordon.

Lee Grocott

Lee Grocott

A 48-year-old man attended the Hanley riots to ‘protest about illegal immigration’ – and ended up being jailed for 32 months. Lee Grocott, of no fixed address, launched missiles in Town Road, shouted anti-Islamic remarks, shouted ‘paedos’, and targeted peaceful protesters outside Hanley Town Hall.

The defendant was identified on CCTV, admitted violent disorder, and was jailed at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court.

Jordan Jones

Jordan Jones has been jailed

A rioter who hurled a brick at police trying to quell trouble in Hanley was jailed for more than two years. Jordan Jones was caught on CCTV launching the missile and shouting abuse as mass disorder erupted in the city centre.

The 27-year-old, of Meir, was sentenced at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court to two-years-and-two-months after pleading guilty to violent disorder and possession of a controlled drug of class B – cannabis.

James Watkins

James Watkins

Dad-of-four James Watkins ‘lost everything again’ having fought back from losing his job in Covid, becoming addicted to monkey dust and ending up on the streets. The 35-year-old has been drug-free for more than a year.

But he is now behind bars after being a ‘continuous presence’ at the August 3 Hanley riots. He was verbally abusive, gesturing, and wielded a bottle after being struck by a police shield.

Watkins, of Sherwin Road, Stanfield, was jailed for three years at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court after admitting a charge of violent disorder.

Jarrod Hollinshead

Jarrod Hollinshead

Homeless Jarrod Hollinshead was jailed for his part in the Hanley riots – after joining what he thought was a ‘music parade with free beer’. The 26-year-old had gone to City Central Library, in Hanley, to email family just an hour after appearing at North Staffordshire Justice Centre.

But the library was shut and he joined what he initially thought was a music parade with the offer of free beer. Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard Hollinshead later threw a brick and shouted ‘f**k all of you’ before being taken to the ground.

The brick had been hauled towards St John’s Church, on Town Road, which Islamic leaders want to turn into the Darul Falah Mosque.


Stoke Sentinel

The protest in Stoke-on-Trent on August 3 was one of a number organised in parts of the country in response to the fatal Southport stabbings.

Five men, including three who threw bricks and other missiles at a mosque, have been jailed for taking part in violent disorder in Stoke-on-Trent.

James Watkins, 35, Andrew Townley, 45, Ashley Morris, 31, Lee Grocott, 48 and Jarrod Hollinshead, 26, each took part in a protest in the city on August 3, which was organised in response to a knife attack at a dance studio in Southport on July 29 that left three girls dead.

Morris, of Newcastle-under-Lyme, Grocott, of Stoke-on-Trent and Hollinshead, of no fixed address, were each caught on CCTV and police body-worn camera throwing missiles including stones and bricks at the Darul Falah mosque in Town Road, Hanley, Staffordshire.

Ashley Morris was seen on camera Morris picking up a brick and throwing it towards the mosque in Town Road, Stoke-on-Trent. (Staffordshire Police/PA)

Stoke Crown Court heard Grocott stood on a bench being “verbally abusive” towards a group of peaceful protesters near the town hall.

Prosecutor Dylan Wagg said he was “clapping and shouting ‘paedos’ towards those protesting”.

Mr Wagg said Grocott told police when he was arrested at his home on September 9, that he had attended to “protest illegal immigration and the state of the country”, and admitted shouting offensive anti-Islamic remarks but denied he said anything racist, and “likened it to football chanting”.

Lee Grocott was verbally abusive towards peaceful protesters but denied saying anything racist, saying it was more like “football chanting”. (Staffordshire Police/PA)

Morris picked up a brick from the ground and threw it towards the mosque after heading into town “with a curiosity to see what was going on”, after he finished work and tried to go to a shop that was closed because of the disorder, his barrister Stuart Muldoon told the court on Tuesday.

The father of three young sons was also the victim of a hammer attack at the protest, which left him with six stitches in his head and a broken nose.

Mr Muldoon said: “Ashley Morris does not hold right-wing views or beliefs. When he woke up on August 3 he had no intention of becoming involved in any protest. He admits he got caught up.

“He feels immense guilt and shame about the position he is in and the position he has put his family in, as they have also become victims of his offending.”

Morris lost his job as a groundworker as a result of being held in custody after his arrest, the court was told.

He was also topless for parts of the protest, as he had taken his shirt off to use as a bandage for an injured woman, Mr Muldoon said.

Hollinshead, who has been homeless for more than a decade and does not own a phone or a computer, took part in the protest hours after leaving the city’s magistrate’s court over an unrelated offence.

The court was told by his barrister, Debbie Leadbeater, that he had been told about a protest when he went to the library to use the computer to email his family, only to find it was closed.

Jarrod Hollinshead had drunk around eight pints of beer while at the protest and threw a brick. (Staffordshire Police/PA)

He said he initially thought it was going to be a parade, with bands and music, and was encouraged to join because there would be free beer shared, but realised it was a protest when he saw bricks being thrown.

He was caught on camera saying words to the effect of “f*** all of you” and was taken to the ground by police when he threw a brick.

Ms Leadbeater said Hollinshead was “suggestible” and had “poor judgment”, adding: “He is autistic and has had an extremely difficult life and suffers with PTSD as a result.

“His behaviour on August 3 is inexplicable and something he truly regrets.

“He is a man who has nothing at all. He has always been on the streets with nothing and no-one at all caring for him.

“He wants to take this as an opportunity to reset his life and use his time in custody to deal with the issues he has had throughout his life.”

Townley, of Hanley, who works in the building trade and was wearing a high-visibility jacket with the telephone number of his workplace on the back, was trying to get to his mother’s home on the other side of the police cordon, and had no intention of being part of a protest, his barrister Jason Holt told the court

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Andrew Townley tried to break through the police line and was pushed back by an officer using her riot shield. (Staffordshire Police/PA)

He was arrested at his workplace after trying to break through the police line, to which he was pushed back by an officer using her riot shield.

He said “you have got no chance against me, no chance, any of you”, before he disappeared back into the crowd.

Mr Holt said Townley’s presence at the protest was “momentary”, adding: “His mother relies heavily on him for things like shopping. He was concerned about her welfare and was annoyed that he had been stopped from getting through the police line to get to her.

“He acknowledges that he tried to walk through the police line, but when he was stopped he went back into the crowd and actually found another route through. He played no other part.

“He states he has no right-wing involvement and was most upset by what he heard being said. He admits he should have removed himself from the situation.

“His family have lived for over 100 years in Shelton, an area which is very multicultural, and he has no axe to grind with anyone he has lived with. He is most upset with his behaviour and how it has affected others.

“He had no weapon and threw nothing, but he accepts his behaviour was totally out of order.

“He is a hardworking man and is someone who volunteered at the cricket club and the local mosque.”

Watkins, who Mr Wagg said had a “continuous presence” at the protest and was at the front of the police line, was also caught on body-worn camera footage standing on a bench being verbally abusive and gesturing with his hands.

He also pushed an officer’s riot shield and said “f*** off you scumbag”.

James Watkins took a half-empty glass bottle out of his bag, which left officers concerned he could use it as a missile. (Staffordshire Police/PA)

Mr Wagg said: “He shouted ‘come on then’ to try to raise more angst. He pulled out a half empty VK glass bottle from his bag and said to someone else ‘get a lighter out of your bag’, and there was a fear he may have used it as a missile towards officers.

“He also said to an officer ‘you hit me again, I’m hitting you with [the bottle].”

Mr Holt, also acting for Watkins, of Stoke-on-Trent, said the defendant also got involved after drinking with a friend in the town centre.

He said: “He says he holds no right-wing beliefs but he accepts that, through curiosity, he got involved and deeply regrets following the protesters.

“His outburst, where he takes out the bottle, was in response to being hit with a shield. He was under the influence of alcohol.

“He overreacted and he is quite ashamed, and ashamed for good reason.”

He said Watkins, a father-of-four, had lost his job because of Covid, had become addicted to monkey dust (a drug also known as MDPV or Methylenedioxypyrovalerone) and became homeless.

He is now drug-free for more than a year, Mr Holt said, adding: “He is proud of the fact he has been able to sort himself out and now he is in a position where he could lose everything again.

“Feelings were high because of things that had been seen and said in the media, and everyone wanted to have their say, and this simply wasn’t the way to go about it.”

Judge Sally Hancox commended each of the defendants, who all have previous convictions, for entering guilty pleas to the charges they face.

She said: “On August 3, the city of Stoke was the location for unlawful disorder, at a time when the city centre would have been busy with people going about their lawful business.

“Weapons were brandished, missiles were thrown and a number of people were injured. The police were simply trying to do their job to protect all civilians.

“Officers placed themselves in harm’s way to keep the community safe.”

Jailing Watkins for 36 months for violent disorder, Judge Hancox acknowledged that letters of support painted a different side of his character, telling him: “It is my sincere hope that this is the James Watkins that emerges from prison in the future.”

Judge Hancox said the charity and community work Townley had done showed there was “good in you”, as she ordered him to serve 34 months for violent disorder, with an eight-month sentence for assaulting an emergency worker, to run concurrently.

Morris was imprisoned for 30 months for violent disorder by the judge, who said letters in support of him made it clear he was “somebody who is well thought of and is a good family man”, adding: “This other side to you makes what you involved yourself in all the sadder.”

Grocott was jailed for 32 months for violent disorder, as Judge Hancox acknowledged his “genuine remorse” at his involvement in the protest.

Hollinshead was given a sentence of 22 months for affray for his part in the disorder, as well as a 14-month sentence for his involvement in the burglary of an 87-year-old man’s house in July.

Evening Standard

A man accused of assaulting a female police officer during unrest in Stoke-on-Trent has pleaded guilty to two charges.

Andrew Townley, 45, of Hanley, admitted violent disorder and assault by beating of an emergency worker at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on Tuesday.

He was remanded into custody to reappear at the court for sentencing on 20 September.

Staffordshire Police said officers were hit and pelted with missiles during clashes in Hanley on 3 August amid widespread disorder in the UK.

The force has arrested more than 70 people and charged 30 following the disorder in the city and in Tamworth the following day.

Riots and anti-immigration protests took place in the country at the start of August.

The unrest followed the fatal stabbings of three girls in Southport in July and was fuelled by false online rumours online that the suspect in the killings was an asylum seeker.

BBC News