Archive

Tag Archives: jailed

Mark Barrow took part in the violent scenes that broke out in his hometown

A man who hurled bricks at police officers in his hometown in “shocking” disorder that saw more than 50 police officers injured has been jailed. Mark Barrow appeared before Liverpool Crown Court on Wednesday morning after pleading guilty to violent disorder.

The 28-year-old of Manchester Road in Southport was handed a two-year-and-four-month prison sentence for his role in the riots, making him the 51st person to be brought before the courts following the horrific scenes that plagued Merseyside this summer.

Detective Sergeant Duncan Sloan said: “Barrow played an active part in the shocking scenes of violent disorder we all witnessed in Southport on 30 July. He was seen throwing a number of bricks towards officers. So far we have made 106 arrests, charged 68, and brought 51 people before the courts – bringing a total of 107 years sentencing.

“Our investigation into the incidents in Merseyside is ongoing with more arrests, charges and sentences to come. We continue to identify more people who attended the disorder in Merseyside and we will not stop until we’ve put everyone we possibly can before the courts.”

Tuesday, September 18, saw the youngest person involved in the violent disorder be sentenced when a 12-year-old boy appeared at Liverpool Youth Court in his school shoes after he handed himself into police. The boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, joined the mob of around 1,000 people gathered on both St Luke’s Road and Sussex Road in Southport who repeatedly targeted a local mosque and police officers with missiles over a number of hours.

Angela Conlan, prosecuting, told Liverpool Youth Court this afternoon, “the defendant is here following the violent disorder on July 30 following on from the tragic stabbing of the three young girls on July 29”. Ms Conlan told the court that the boy was with a friend on the night of the disorder and threw two stones towards a line of police officers at around 8.45pm.

The judge sentenced the boy to a 12-month referral order. This means the boy must agree to a contract of rehabilitative and restorative elements with the court, as well as doing extra work in the community with various agencies.

Liverpool Echo

Two more men have been jailed for their role in a city centre protest which turned violent.

James Maine, 44, and Shane Dennis, 30, were sentenced at Bristol Crown Court earlier in connection with the disorder in Bristol on Saturday 3 August.

The unrest occurred when protesters and counter protesters gathered near Castle Park in the city centre.

Avon and Somerset Police have arrested 51 people in connection with the disorder, with 37 being charged so far.

Maine, of Kingswood, received a 28-month jail sentence after throwing missiles at police and punching a member of the public, which was captured on CCTV.

Judge Peter Blair said Maine’s involvement was “persistent”, and described him as “one of the central individuals” carrying our the violent disorder.

Dennis, of Knowle, was jailed for four weeks after pleading guilty to a racially-aggravated public order offence after shouting racist remarks in Castle Park that same day.

Judge Blair accepted Dennis was not directly involved in the violence, but said his actions were “provocative” and helped fuel the disorder.

Demonstrations took place across England after three young girls were killed in Southport, Merseyside, on 29 July.

False claims were spread online that the person responsible was an asylum seeker who had arrived in the UK by boat.

“There was no excuse for violence that day,” said Det Ch Insp Tom Herbert.

“The scenes played out in Bristol on 3 August were criminal and disgraceful, and now more than 20 people have been sentenced for what they did on that day.

“Detectives are continuing to investigate, and work with the Crown Prosecution Service and the courts to ensure all those responsible for such reprehensible scenes are brought to justice.”

Avon and Somerset Police said it was still keen to identify a number of people, external that officers want to speak to as part of their investigation.

Earlier, a 25-year-old man from the Shirehampton area of Bristol was arrested on suspicion of violent disorder and is currently in police custody.
BBC News

A teenager who ran into a hotel housing asylum seekers after large crowds smashed windows and doors during large-scale disorder has been told he will be detained for more than two years.

Ashley Lowe, 19, was among a group who attacked police outside the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham, on 4 August.

He went to the trouble “because there was nothing else to do” and it led to him kicking fence panels and entering the building, Sheffield Crown Court was told.

Lowe, of North Street, Darfield, admitted violent disorder and was told he would serve two years and two months at a youth offenders’ institution.

Family members in the public gallery cried during the hearing, where Lowe was seen to have participated in the disorder in footage played to the court.

A photo from the scene showed him near a group of people who were throwing items at officers.

Former professional boxer Luke Crowcroft was also jailed for his role in the violence.

He was filmed on CCTV rocking a police dog van, leaving the officers inside fearing it would be tipped over.

Crowcroft, 30, of Danesway, Doncaster, was arrested on the 27 August, more than three weeks after the violence.

He pleaded guilty to violent disorder at an earlier court appearance.

Character references sent to the judge outlined how he had engaged in charity work and represented his country as a boxer at a young age.

“All of his life he has been disciplined… save for that day,” his barrister said in mitigation.

“He wishes to apologise for the shame he has brought on his own family.”

He was jailed for two years and six months.

Ben Beardsley, 38, of Hall Gate, Mexborough, Doncaster, also pleaded guilty to a charge of violent disorder.

He wore a white Guy Fawkes mask during his part in the trouble, the court was told.

He was filmed throwing lumps of concrete towards police officers, with his defence counsel adding he was drunk during the disorder.

In court, the father-of-two was jailed for two years and eight months.

Joshua Webb, 21, of Hartington Close, Rotherham, went to the hotel “out of curiosity” before becoming embroiled in the violence, the court was told.

Video filmed by a resident showed Webb, wearing a “distinctive” Icon tracksuit throwing pieces of wood towards the police line.

He was jailed for two years and six months, with his sentence being reduced following his co-operation with police.

“You made a very poor decision to attend,” Judge Sarah Wright told him during the hearings in courtroom number seven.

‘Chill out’

A man who was charged with arson being reckless as to whether life was in danger also appeared in court.

He pleaded guilty to the offence, along with a count of violent disorder.

The arson charge related to a disused generator on the edge of the hotel car park.

Scott Greenwood, 34, of Tingle Bridge Lane, Hemingfield, started speaking with someone in the public gallery, leading to the judge telling him to be quiet.

He replied: “Alright mate, chill out.”

He claimed he “hadn’t even done owt” when questioned by the judge for speaking during the hearing.

When told to leave, he shouted to the public gallery: “See you in a bit”.

In his absence, a sentencing date was set for 16 October.

BBC News

A man has been jailed for 14 months after assaulting a police officer during an anti-immigration protest.

Ian Wyn Thomas, 47, of Elliott Road in Bournemouth, Dorset, attended the protest on The Esplanade in Weymouth on 4 August.

Dorset Police said he was seen to confront and push an officer, before throwing his right hand toward their head, which the officer blocked with their arm.

He pleaded guilty to violent disorder and assaulting an emergency worker at Bournemouth Crown Court on 10 September.

Thomas was identified following a review of footage and other evidence gathered from the protest, the force said.

An estimated 400 anti-immigration protesters gathered in Weymouth on 4 August. There were also about 200 Stand Up to Racism demonstrators.

It was one of a number of violent outbreaks across England and Northern Ireland, following the fatal stabbing of three girls in Southport – with unrest fuelled by misinformation online.

Another man, James Ashley Hepburn, 31, from Portland, was previously charged with encouraging or assisting in the commission of offences of murder believing one or more will be committed.

The charge, in connection with the same protest, was discontinued at Bournemouth Crown Court on 30 August.

He will instead appear at Poole Magistrates’ Court on 30 September charged with using threatening, abusive, insulting words or behaviour with intent to cause fear or provocation.

BBC News

Luke Crowcroft, 30, was part of a mob which attacked a police van during the disorder at the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham on August 4.

A barrister representing a former professional boxer who was part of a mob which attacked a police van outside a hotel housing asylum seekers has told a judge it is “just bizarre” to everyone who knows him that he got involved in the violence.

Doncaster-based Luke Crowcroft, 30, was jailed for two years and six months at Sheffield Crown Court on Monday by a judge who heard how he was part of a group which tried to overturn a police van outside the Holiday Inn Express, in Manvers, Rotherham, on August 4, leaving those inside terrified.

Ed Moss, defending, told the court how Crowcroft was a successful boxer from an early age, represented his country as an amateur and later became the youngest professional.

He told the court: “This is a man who, all of his life, has been disciplined.”

Mr Moss said: “It is simply not in his nature. It is just bizarre to everyone who knows him why he was there and doing what he did.

“Out of character simply doesn’t do it justice”.

Mr Moss said Crowcroft was devoted to the 15-year-old son of his partner, who has a number of problems, and the defendant is a key part of his care.

He said: “He wishes me, on his behalf, to apologise to everybody – to the court, to the police, to his own family.”

Judge Sarah Wright was shown video footage of how the police dog van was violently rocked by a group outside the hotel.

The court was told how there was a chief inspector and a Pc inside, as well as a dog, and a statement from the junior officer outlined how he was terrified the vehicle was going to be overturned and set on fire.

The incident was part of wider rioting outside the hotel which left 64 officers, three police dogs and a horse injured.

There were 240 asylum seekers in hotel, which protesters tried to set on fire, and the court has heard how staff barricaded themselves in the kitchen with freezers, fearing they would die.

According to boxing data available on the internet, middleweight Crowcroft was nicknamed The Beast and had 14 bouts, with 11 wins.

He turned professional in 2012 and his last fight was in 2018.

Crowcroft, of Danesway, Scawthorpe, Doncaster, admitted violent disorder at a previous hearing.

The Independent

Christian Ivermee, from Mexborough, South Yorkshire, admitted violent disorder at a previous hearing.

A 31-year-old man who kicked and punched police during rioting outside a hotel housing asylum seekers has been jailed for two years and eight months.

Footage was shown at Sheffield Crown Court on Friday of Christian Ivermee kicking an officer who had fallen down as he and colleagues were trying to protect the Holiday Inn Express, at Manvers, on August 4.

Ivermee was also captured throwing a large piece of wood at officers with shields.

He was the latest of more than 30 people who have now been jailed following the violence involving around 400 people who targeted the hotel, which was housing 240 asylum seekers.

Some of the mob broke into the building and tried to set it on fire as 64 police officers, three police horses and a police dog were injured.

The court has also heard how hotel staff feared they were going to die as they barricaded themselves into the kitchen using freezers to block the doors.

Sentencing Ivermee on Friday, Judge Sarah Wright described how he goaded officers before throwing a large piece of wood at police and then assaulted them “more than once, including kicking and punching”.

Judge Wright said: “Your actions were particularly violent and you were enthusiastically involved in protracted threats and violence.

“The police officers behaved with immense professionalism in the face of a determined and violent mob.”

She said she had taken into account references which painted a picture of a caring man who looked after his grandmother, and who had never been in trouble with the law before, despite a difficult upbringing.

But the judge said: “The man they’ve described is unrecognisable from the footage that I have seen.”

She said: “You were part of a violent mob and you were playing your part to the full.”

Ivermee, of Chapel Street, Mexborough, South Yorkshire, admitted violent disorder at a previous hearing.

Evening Standard

A serial criminal attacked two police officers who were trying to prevent disorder on a Sunderland v Newcastle derby day.

Thomas Allan verbally abused one victim, calling him a “black ****” and threatened to follow him home before he kicked a female officer three times in the stomach.

Newcastle Crown Court heard police had conducted a safety operation in Sunderland on January 6, when the city’s football team clashed with bitter rivals Newcastle, for the first time in eight years.

The game ended with three-goal defeat for Sunderland and there was a large police presence in the city to stop any potential trouble.

Prosecutor Caroline McGurk said Allan was “in drink” and had shouted at officers who refused him entry to a train station.

Miss McGurk said: “He verbally abused a female officer, calling her an ugly ****. He was arrested for being drunk and disorderly.

“The defendant resisted arrest and was taken to the ground, where he repeatedly referred to the only ethnic minority officer as a black **** and threatened to follow him home.

“A female officer restrained him by holding onto his legs. However, he freed himself from her grasp and kicked her three times in the stomach.”

Allan, 38, of Hendon Valley Road, Sunderland, who has 91 convictions on his record and was out of prison on licence at the time, admitted racially aggravated harassment, alarm or distress and assault on an emergency worker.

Judge Tim Gittins said the racial abuse was “abhorrent” and told Allan: “It demonstrated, in your drunken state, hostility towards him simply because he has a different colour of skin to you, which demonstrates an ugly ignorance.”

Judge Gittins said the officer who was kicked was simply trying to do her job and look after people.

Allan was sentence to 18 weeks and ordered to pay £200 compensation to both officers.

Fiona Lamb, defending, said Allan has a good work record and is confident he will be able to return to employment after his release.

Sunderland Echo

A 30-year-old man who claimed he was too drunk to remember throwing an object at riot police outside a hotel housing more than 200 asylum seekers has been jailed for two-and-a-half years.

Charlie Eames, of High Street, Sheffield, is the latest person to be jailed for being part of the mob which besieged the Holiday Inn Express, in Manvers, Rotherham, on August 4.

Police body-worn camera footage was shown at Sheffield Crown Court on Thursday which showed Eames at the front of the crowd with no shirt, but wearing a padded gillet and with a bottle of alcohol pushed down his waistband.

When prosecutor Neil Coxon suggested this was a bottle of beer, Eames corrected him over the prison videolink, stating it was a bottle of Stones Ginger Wine.

The footage showed Eames throwing an unknown object at the line of riot shields and then encouraging another man in a mask to throw a large piece of wood at officers.

Rebecca Tanner, defending, told the court her client was an alcoholic, had drunk a substantial amount before the incident captured on video, and could not remember throwing the object, which the court heard could have been a branch.

She said Eames, who admitted violent disorder, had seen the protest happening outside the hotel on TikTok before it turned violent and decided go along, believing it to be “peaceful”.

Ms Tanner told the court: “He readily accepts he was highly intoxicated.”

She added: “When the mood shifted, he became a willing participant.”

More than 80 people have now been charged, and more than 30 jailed, following the violence involving around 400 people who targeted the hotel, which was housing 240 asylum seekers.

Some of the mob broke into the building and tried to set it on fire as 64 police officers, three police horses and a police dog were injured.

Judge Sarah Wright also jailed 29-year-old Morgan Hardy for his role in the disorder outside the hotel.

Hardy, of Melton High Street, Rotherham, was sent to prison for three years after the judge heard how he threw fence panels, a fire extinguisher and a chair at the line of officers.

The court heard that he was part of a group shouting “we want our country back” and could be seen on footage at the front of the crowd, taunting officers with his arms outstretched.

The judge was told that, after his arrest, he asked police if the “immigrants” had all gone from the hotel.

When told that they had been moved, he said: “Good. No more women and children will be hurt.”

Ms Tanner, this time defending Hardy, said he was a hard-working family man who only went to the hotel to be nosey but ended up doing something he admitted was “deplorable”.

She said: “He has brought shame on himself and shame on his family.”

Also on Thursday, father-of-five Cameron Callear, 30, of Orchard Way, Thurnscoe, was jailed for two years and 10 months for his part in the Manvers disorder.

Footage shown in court showed Callear kicking out at police riot shields and then breaking the leg off a chair which had been brought out of the hotel.

The defendant was then seen to throw the leg at police lines as another man launched the remains of the chair at officers.

All three men admitted violent disorder at previous hearings.

MSN

Two men have been jailed for their involvement in a violent city protest last month.

Lee Gilpin, 43, and Michael Tarling, 42, both of Stoke Gifford, Bristol, were sentenced to two years in prison at Bristol Crown Court earlier after pleading guilty to violent disorder.

Both men were part of groups that became violent or threatening, causing fear for others’ safety during the disorder on 3 August.

The unrest occurred when hundreds of far-right protesters and a counter-protest group gathered for two demonstrations near Castle Park in Bristol on 3 August.

During the unrest the court heard Gilpin threw a concrete parasol stand at the windscreen of a police vehicle and verbally abused and assaulted members of the public and officers outside the Mercure Hotel.

He also kicked an officer’s bike, police said.

Police said Tarling threw an object at officers before kicking and punching another man on Redcliffe Way. He later threw an object into a crowd of people.

The court heard that Tarling also made racial comments and gestured towards police officers and counter protestors.

So far, 19 people have been sentenced for their involvement.

A total of 50 people have been arrested and 37 have been charged, police said.

Det Ch Insp Tom Herbert said: “Both these men played significant roles in the violent disorder we saw in Bristol that day and have rightfully been sentenced for it.

“Nineteen people have now been sentenced in court and are serving more than 35 years combined in prison.”

A total of 50 people have been arrested in connection with the disorder.

Of those, 37 have been charged.

Demonstrations took place across England after three young girls were killed in Southport, Merseyside, on 29 July.

Avon and Somerset Police said it was keen to identify a number of people, external, officers want to speak to as part of their investigation.

BBC News

A man who claimed he was too drunk to remember throwing an object at riot police outside a hotel housing asylum seekers has been jailed for two-and-a-half years.

Charlie Eames, 30, from Sheffield, admitted a charge of violent disorder related to the targeting of the Holiday Inn Express, in Manvers, Rotherham, on 4 August.

Police body-worn camera footage played at Sheffield Crown Court showed Eames throwing an unknown object at police before encouraging another man to throw a large piece of wood.

The hotel had been housing more than 200 asylum seekers at the time, with the violence involving about 400 people.

Rebecca Tanner, defending Eames, of High Street, said her client had seen videos of crowds outside the hotel on social media before it turned violent and decided to go along, believing it to be “peaceful”.

She told the court Eames had drunk a substantial amount before the incident and could not remember throwing the object.

“He readily accepts he was highly intoxicated,” she told the hearing.

“When the mood shifted, he became a willing participant.”

In the body-worn footage, Eames is seen at the front of the crowd wearing a gilet with a bottle of ginger wine pushed down his waistband.

Some of the mob broke into the hotel and tried to set it on fire, with 64 police officers, three police horses and a police dog left injured.

More than 80 people have been charged following the violence, with more than 30 jailed.

BBC News