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Deana Evans, 32, was ‘launching missiles and trying to push through police lines’, police said.

A popular social media post – which has been liked and shared tens of thousands of times – claimed that a woman was sentenced to 20 months in prison for shouting during recent disorder and filming a riot.

The post read: “A woman that filmed the anti-open border riots in Britain and shouted ‘we want our country back’ has been sentenced to 20 months prison. What’s going on in Soviet Britain?”

The post was also boosted by a major account on social media site X.

Evaluation

Deana Evans, 32, of Newcastle-under-Lyme, was sentenced at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on August 30, to 20 months in prison after pleading guilty to violent disorder and common assault of an emergency worker.
The facts

Staffordshire Police said Evans was seen on CCTV and officers’ body-worn video footage “launching missiles and trying to push through police lines” in Stoke-on-Trent.

She was also “verbally abusive to the officers,” a spokesman for the force said.

When police went to her home to arrest her, “Evans lashed out at an officer when her phone was seized, hitting him in the chest with her elbow.”

According to a news report she did shout “we want our country back” during the protests.

The person who originally posted the claim on social media included a link to this news report, but their first message on X, formerly Twitter, did not include details of all the offences for which Evans was sentenced.

Evening Standard

A man and his girlfriend have been jailed for their involvement in violent disorder that broke out in Stoke-on-Trent amid a wave of unrest in the UK.

Ciaran Lockett and Deana Evans, from Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, appeared at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on Friday over the disturbances in Hanley on 3 August.

Lockett, 34, was given a 32-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to violent disorder in which he aimed projectiles towards a mosque.

Evans, 32, was jailed for 20 months after admitting violent disorder and common assault of an emergency worker.

The disorder came as riots and anti-immigration protests took place across the UK at the beginning of August.

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

Dylan Wagg, prosecuting, said Lockett played a leading role in the disorder, which involved shouting at police officers and trying to push through their lines.

He was then seen throwing rocks and missiles over police and towards a mosque in the centre of Hanley.

Both Lockett and his partner Evans were caught on CCTV being verbally abusive towards officers, Staffordshire Police said after sentencing.

The force added the pair were also seen stopping a police van that was trying to get through the crowds on blue lights.

The court heard Evans had elbowed an officer while she was being arrested at the couple’s home on 22 August.

Steve Hennessy, defending, said they both “deeply regretted” their actions.

The court was told they had previously been homeless and struggling with drugs but they had managed to get themselves clean.

Assistant Chief Constable Stuart Ellison, of Staffordshire Police, said: “We’ve been working tirelessly to review all of the evidence available to identify those involved in the disorder and take decisive action.

“More arrests, charges and convictions will follow across Staffordshire as we continue to act on information from the public and put a stop to those who subjected our communities to senseless violence.”

Staffordshire Police has arrested 60 people and charged 25 in connection with the unrest in Hanley and also Tamworth.

BBC News

A man and his girlfriend have been jailed for their involvement in violent disorder that broke out in Stoke-on-Trent amid a wave of unrest in the UK.

Ciaran Lockett and Deana Evans from Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, appeared at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on Friday over the disturbances in Hanley on 3 August.

At the hearing, Lockett, 34, was given a 32-month prison sentence for violent disorder.

Evans, 32, was jailed for 20 months for violent disorder and common assault of an emergency worker.

Riot police were deployed in Hanley when violence broke out, with three officers injured.

The incident came as riots and anti-immigration protests took place across the UK at the beginning of August.

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

BBC News