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A man has been jailed after disorder in Staffordshire last summer.

Kyle Barber, 24, of Worthing Grove, Tamworth, pleaded guilty to violent disorder at Stafford Crown Court on Monday.

Barber, who was arrested after disturbances at the Holiday Inn Express in August, was sentenced to 11 months in prison. His sentence was reduced by the 161 days he has spent in custody since being remanded.

Rioters targeted the hotel which was believed to have been housing asylum seekers as part of a wave of disorder that swept the UK after the killing of three young girls in Southport.

Hanley in Stoke-on-Trent was among places which also saw unrest.

BBC News

The judge said Joseph McKenzie’s behaviour ‘went far beyond any legitimate public protest’

A Middlesbrough protestor who was ‘at the forefront of the riots,’ has been locked up.

Joseph McKenzie shouted and swore, and “encouraged other rioters to throw a burning wheelie bin at the police’ who stood in a line blocking protestors from breaking away from the march and going down Clarendon Road on August 4. McKenzie, 28, was captured screaming: “I hate the *****,” as violence erupted around him. “Mobs hurled bricks” at officers and police cars were targeted – as 320 officers were deployed in Middlesbrough to police the riots.

McKenzie was convicted of violent disorder by a jury after standing trial at Teesside Crown Court. He claimed that he had become caught up in the riots after he tried to take a shortcut back to his car – which he said he needed to do because of his disabilities – when the police prevented him from doing so.

But on Monday, Judge Jonathan Carroll rejected McKenzie’s story, telling him that he had been seen to be fit and able on the CCTV, showing him walking during the riots.

McKenzie, of Skeldale Grove, in Darlington, appeared in court on video link from Holme House prison. Rachel Masters, prosecuting, told the court that PC Lake saw McKenzie and described him as being “at the forefront of the riots.” Ms Masters told the court that McKenzie was captured “encouraging other rioters to throw a lit wheelie bin at the line of police.”

The court heard that on some streets, the windows of every home were smashed. Ms Masters said that one resident told the police that she saw “mobs hurling bricks” outside.

In mitigation, Alarie Walmsley asked the court to consider a suspended prison sentence. McKenzie “had not thrown missiles or hid his identity in a balaclava,” Mr Walmsley said that his client was held on remand “since his arrest – his lesson has well and truly been learnt.”

Judge Carroll told McKenzie: “You were part of a body of people that had taken to the streets motivated by political cause. We have a longstanding tradition in the UK, of the right to protest. The punishment to be placed on you is not for protesting.

“You, as part and parcel of the violent disorder, went far beyond any legitimate protest. When missiles were thrown, this ceased to be a peaceful protest. You should have left the scene.

“You can be seen in the footage – your attitude, your anger – you were hurling the most unpleasant expletives. It is true that you did not hurl any missiles but you were encouraging the efforts of others, at one stage, to throw a burning wheelie bin at the police.”

McKenzie was jailed for 33 months.

Gazette Live

A man who became “consumed by misinformation” travelled to, and was at the forefront of the disorder and rioting in a North East town and city last summer.

Ashley Mark Wilkinson, from County Durham, although not an organiser, but, “an active follower” in the rioting and disorder, was today (Monday January 20) jailed for six years at Newcastle Crown Court.

Wilkinson was said to have become “obsessed” with right-wing propaganda, was actively involved in both the serious disorder in Hartlepool on July 31 and the rioting in Sunderland only two days later.

Masked at both events, he repeatedly threw missiles at police and hit their shields with a baton near the Cenotaph in Hartlepool, while encouraging others to join in, all the time draped in a cross of St George.

Then, on August 2 in Sunderland, he threw fencing supports, a beer keg and other items at the police lines, and was again at the forefront of trouble, both in Keel Square and near to the city mosque, off Hylton Road, where he hurled bricks towards officers protecting the place of worship.

A week later he was detained and arrested on his way to attend a further planned protest and counter protest in Newcastle, where he was found to be carrying a back pack containing what has been described as “a riot kit”, containing fishing wire, ball bearings, firelighters, goggles and a face covering.

Although not charged over that incident, he was subsequently faced with counts of violent disorder for both the trouble in Hartlepool and Sunderland, with his offending in the latter upgraded to “riot” following a further review of evidence.

Despite his initial denials, 35-year-old Wilkinson, of James Street South, Murton, was to later admit both charges of violent disorder and riot.

Appearing at his sentencing hearing today via video link from HMP Durham, the court heard he was repentant and full of remorse, having even discussed his actions with an Imam while detained in custody.

His counsel, Tony Cornberg, said the father-of-three suffered with mental health issues at the time of his offending, while also ailing from conditions such as narcolepsy, causing sleepless nights, all exacerbated by his use of cannabis.

Tony Cornberg, defending, said Wilkinson had suffered from sleep problems which affected his mental health and he could stay up for 48 hours consuming right-wing material online.

He said since being held on remand, the defendant has engaged with the counter-terror specialists Prevent and, at their suggestion, met the prison imam to learn more about Islam which had turned his views around, the court heard.

Mr Cornberg said a lack of sleep may have led to Wilkinson feeling paranoia and came to accept what he heard from “well-spoken” and “well-educated” right-wing commentators online.

“He says now that the videos were nothing more than propaganda and fear-mongering,” Mr Cornberg said.

“His issue seems to have a lot to do with authority and conspiracy rather than a hatred of a people, race or religion, per se.”

Passing sentence, Judge Tim Gittins said he acknowledged that the defendant had become “immersed in online material and misleading information” in the days and weeks prior to the events of late July and early August last year, which, “brought shame on the town of Hartlepool and the city of Sunderland.”

But he said by his enthusiastic participation in both events he played a part in “encouraging others to behave in a similar fashion”.

Judge Gittins told Wilkinson: “Those participating in mass disorder must expect severe sentences not only to punish but also to deter others from copying their actions.”

He said right-thinking members of the community were fearful to go into the town and city centres affected where widespread damage and violence was caused by such as Wilkinson.

The court was read statements by both the Chief Constables of Cleveland and Northumbria, Mark Webster and Vanessa Jardine, outlining the impact the disorder and rioting had in terms of injuries to police personnel and vehicles and the longer term psychological affects on officers involved.

Judge Gittins said based on figures put forward by the respective police chiefs the damage appeared to have cost in excess of £2m to the two forces combined.

The judge passed a 22-month sentence on Wilkinson for the violent disorder in Hartlepool and added 50 months for the riot in Sunderland, to be served consecutively, totalling 72 months, or six years.

Northern Echo

A self-confessed conspiracy theorist who attacked police officers at two different riots within three days has been jailed for six years.

Ashley Wilkinson, 35, wore an England flag as he threw missiles at officers in Hartlepool, then hurled items including a beer keg at police in Sunderland, Newcastle Crown Court heard.

He was arrested several days later at a Newcastle protest with items including goggles, lighters, fishing wire, ball bearings and cannabis in his backpack, the court heard.

Wilkinson, who claimed he formed anti-Islamic views after watching “misinformation” online, initially denied any involvement in the attacks but eventually admitted rioting and violent disorder.

The protests were organised in the wake of the Southport attack, with crowds gathering in Hartlepool on 31 July after addresses linked to asylum seekers were published online, the court heard.

Wilkinson had his face covered and was draped in a St George’s flag when he repeatedly threw missiles at a line of police officers and wielded a baton towards them, prosecutor Omar Ahmad said.

‘Unprecedented violence’

On 2 August he went to Sunderland and joined protests there, the court heard.

Footage was shown in court of Wilkinson throwing a metal fence and beer keg towards officers in Keel Square, and then hurling a brick at police who were guarding a mosque in Hylton Road, the court heard.

He was arrested on 10 August trying to go to another protest, Mr Ahmad said, with concerning items found in his backpack – although he was not charged with an offence over them.

In statements read to the court, the chief constables of Cleveland and Northumbria Police said officers had faced unprecedented levels of violent and aggression and communities had been badly damaged by the riots.

Nineteen officers were injured in Hartlepool and four in Sunderland, with the two protests costing the forces more than £2m in total, the court heard.

The court heard Wilkinson, previously of St James Street South in Murton, County Durham, but now of no fixed abode, had 24 previous convictions for 59 offences including for dishonesty, criminal drug and drugs.

‘Consumed by misinformation’

In mitigation, Tony Cornberg said Wilkinson had mental health issues and a chronic lack of sleep which led to him spending hours watching videos online, sometimes for days at a time.

Wilkinson was exposed to right-wing “misinformation” and developed strong views about Islam based on “limited” knowledge, Mr Cornberg said.

He said Wilkinson believed there was a conspiracy of secrecy, cover-ups and “betrayal of the British people” but now “clearly sees things very differently”.

The court heard Wilkinson had been involved in the Prevent programme while being held on remand in HMP Durham and spent time talking to the prison’s imam, which had radically changed his opinions.

Judge Tim Gittins said Wilkinson had been at the “frontline” at both protests and was part of a group who had “brought shame” on Sunderland and Hartlepool during an “orgy of mindless violence”.

The judge said every act inflamed and encouraged others and the violence caused “severe disruption”.

He accepted Wilkinson was “consumed by misinformation” and had been “led astray” rather than being a leader, but that did not justify his actions.

BBC News

Video shows Ethan Bowes throwing a sock – filled with heavy items – at a line of police in Middlesbrough

A teenage boy who threw items at the police during the Middlesbrough riots on August 4, wept as he was jailed today.

Ethan Bowes, 19, was captured on CCTV throwing an item at two police officers standing next to their van, in chaotic scenes on Victoria Road. He was later captured throwing a sock – filled with heavy items – at a line of police on Granville Road.

He gestured at them and was seen “goading” officers, who were trying to police the violence across the town centre. 320 police officers were taken off normal duties to police the riots that day. The unrest saw bins set on fire, and items thrown at the police, as rioters smashed the windows of university and court buildings.

On Friday, Bowes appeared at Teesside Crown Court on video link from HMP Durham. He wiped his eyes as his barrister Harry Crowson said that Bowes’s parents were in court, and that they had written references about their son, for the judge to read.

When he was arrested shortly after the riots, Bowes had rocks on him. He initially denied the offences, but he later pleaded guilty to violent disorder and to the possession of an offensive weapon.

Mr Crowson told the court that Bowes has spent over five months on remand, and jail “is the last place he expected to be.”

“He is not used to the prison environment,” Mr Crowson continued, “his parents have missed him a great deal. They have additional needs and his foolish actions have deprived his family business of his help. At the time of his arrest, he was coming out of an extraordinary traumatic event that occurred when he was 14.”

The court heard that Bowes was due to start college and that he wanted to be a mental health nurse but “that may be parked forever, now.”

Judge Tom Mitchell told Bowes: “You knew what you did. You knew you were guilty and you should have said that earlier on. You took part in the violence that blighted Middlesbrough.

“I have no doubt that your autism led you to follow others. You found yourself caught in the maelstrom of violence that day. It doesn’t explain why you chose to throw missiles and taunt the police.

“The true sons and daughters of Middlesbrough weren’t there – they were out on the streets the next day cleaning up the mess. This community will recover from what happened and it will come back stronger.”

Bowes, of Woodhouse Road in Guisborough, wept as he was sent to a young offenders’ institution for 21-months.

Gazette Live

Callum Parslow attacked Nahom Hagos, who is from Eritrea, while he was eating at the Pear Tree Inn in April last year. The 32-year-old has Hitler’s signature tattooed on his arm and tried to post a “terrorist manifesto” on X.

A Nazi-obsessed man has been jailed for attempted murder after he stabbed an asylum seeker in a terrorist attack.

Callum Parslow was handed a life sentence and will serve a minimum of 22 years and eight months in prison after he knifed the man at a Worcestershire hotel on 2 April last year, as a “protest” against small boat crossings.

The victim, Nahom Hagos, from Eritrea, said it was a “miracle” he survived after being stabbed in the chest and hand.

Parslow, 32, has Hitler’s signature tattooed on his arm and used a £770 knife he had bought online to attack Mr Hagos when he was eating in the conservatory of the Pear Tree Inn at Hindlip.

During sentencing, the judge, Mr Justice Dove, told Parslow: “You committed a vicious and unprovoked assault on a complete stranger Nahom Hagos who suffered devastating injuries as a result of your violence.”

The judge also said Parslow, from Worcester, was “motivated by your adoption of a far-right neo-Nazi mindset which fuelled your warped, violent and racist views”, and added: “This was undoubtedly a terrorist attack.”

He was found guilty of attempted murder in October last year.

Leicester Crown Court heard at the time that Mr Hagos, who used to live at the hotel, was visiting a friend and was stabbed after Parslow asked him for directions to the toilet.

CCTV from the scene showed Mr Hagos fleeing to a car park and being chased by Parslow. He was able to run back into the main reception area, where the hotel manager locked the front door.

Parslow later re-entered through another door apparently searching for further victims, the court heard.

The hotel manager and a builder used a van to take Mr Hagos to hospital in Worcester, as they felt he was losing too much blood, where he was found to have an 8cm-long wound which had not penetrated any of his vital organs.

After trying to kill Mr Hagos, Parslow ran towards a canal and was spotted with what appeared to be blood on his hands.

Officers found blood containing a DNA profile matching that of the victim on the blade of the knife abandoned by Parslow.

Failed manifesto post

After the stabbing and as police closed in, Parslow tried to post a “terrorist manifesto” on X, tagging Tommy Robinson and politicians including Nigel Farage, Suella Braverman and Sir Keir Starmer.

He wrote that he “just did my duty to England” and had tried to “exterminate” Mr Hagos. However, it failed to send as he copied in too many people.

Others on his list included Laurence Fox, Lee Anderson, Boris Johnson, Donald Trump and various news organisations.

Nazi memorabilia at bedsit

During the trial last October, the court heard an axe, metal baseball bat and a second knife were found at Parslow’s bedsit in Bromyard Terrace in Worcester.

Police also discovered a swastika armband, a Nazi-era medallion and copies of Hitler’s book Mein Kampf.

Jurors were also told Parslow had Hitler’s signature tattooed on his arm “in order to demonstrate his affiliation to the ideals of the leader of the German Nazi party”.

He also pleaded guilty to an unconnected sexual offence and two charges of sending electronic communications with intent to cause distress and anxiety at the time.

‘The pain feels unbearable’

Mr Hagos told the court in an impact statement he continues to feel “excruciating pain” in his hand after the attack by Parslow.

Read out by the prosecution on Friday, he said: “The pain is unbearable and keeps me awake all night long.

“The pain feels like an electric shock going through my hand and I now have insomnia.”

He then said he had been “living and pursuing a happy life before the incident,” but added: “I feel lonely and don’t feel safe on the street.

“My life has been turned upside down.”

Sky News

Two men have been jailed for more than two years for causing “real fear” during disorder in a city centre.

Joe Saunders, 42, of Exeter, and Mark Goodman, 38, of no fixed address, pleaded guilty to violent disorder when they appeared at Bristol Crown Court this week.

Both men aggressively shouted at officers and threw objects during the incident at Castle Park on 3 August.

Avon and Somerset Police’s Det Ch Insp Tom Herbert said the action of both men put people “at risk of harm” and caused “real fear”.

The court was told that Goodman threw cans from the crowd and attempted to punch an officer.

He also kicked an officer’s bike. Goodman was sentenced to 30 months in prison when he appeared in court on Thursday.

During the violent disorder, Saunders threw objects towards police and was verbally abusive, the court was told.

Saunders, who appeared in court on Tuesday, was jailed for 28 months.

DCI Herbert added: “They have rightly received significant prison sentences for their behaviour as part of the group on that day, and follow the several dozen people who have already been sentenced for their involvement.”

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

BBC News

A teenager involved in what police have described as a Satanist terror network targeting children online for sexual blackmail and violence has been jailed for six years at the Old Bailey.

Cameron Finnigan pleaded guilty to encouraging suicide, possessing a terrorism manual, and indecent images of a child.

The court heard the 19-year-old from Horsham was part of an extreme right-wing Satanist group called 764, which anti-terror police warn poses “an immense threat”.

At least four British teenagers have been arrested in connection with the activities of the group, which has blackmailed children – mainly girls – into carrying out sexual acts, harming themselves or or even attempting suicide.

Warning – this article contains distressing content

At a previous hearing Finnigan admitted five charges and he has now been given a six-year sentence with an extended three-year licence period.

Mr Justice Jay said he posed “a high risk of serious harm to the public”.

Finnigan was arrested in March 2024 after police received information that he had a gun.

No firearm was found at his home but after analysing his digital devices, officers found online chats where he encouraged one young female, believed to be in Italy, to livestream her own suicide.

Officers have been unable to identify this woman and do not know what happened to her.

In online chats Finnigan boasted to other members of 764 about his attempts to get children to hurt themselves.

Det Ch Supt Claire Finlay, head of Counter Terrorism Policing South East, says the members competed to see who was the most extreme: “If you can get someone to self-harm, you’re doing quite well in that group. If you can get them to kill themselves, you’re reaching the pinnacle.”

An 11-page PDF document was also found on Finnigan’s computer, giving detailed instructions on how to carry out a “mass casualty” terrorist attack using a lorry, firearm or knives.

And on the Telegram messaging platform, he and other members plotted what they called “terror week”.

He told the group he planned to murder a homeless man living in a tent near his home, and even posted pictures of the location.

“I won’t stop until he’s dead,” he wrote online.

“This case has been very shocking,” said Det Ch Supt Finlay. “Cameron Finnigan was dangerous. There was a threat to public safety there.”

‘An immense threat’

The 764 network was founded in 2020 by a US teenager, Bradley Cadenhead, who was then 15. It is believed to be named after the partial postal code of his hometown in Texas.

Police say it is part of a loose, international network of far-right extremist groups that have adopted what officers call “militant accelerationist ideology”.

Those who have researched the groups say they seek to destroy modern, civilised society by committing depraved acts of violence and sexual exploitation – often involving children.

Cadenhead was arrested in 2021 and is now serving an 80-year prison sentence in Texas for the creation of videos in which children were not only being sexually abused, but also choked, beaten, suffocated and seriously injured.

The network uses Nazi and Satanist imagery. Finnigan, who went by the online username “Acid”, adorned his bedroom in West Sussex with swastikas and pentagrams.

In one online post, he wrote: “Acid is Hitler’s child”.

Last year, the FBI released an unprecedented warning about 764, saying it “uses threats, blackmail, and manipulation to control the victims into recording or live-streaming self-harm, sexually explicit acts, and/or suicide”.

Now British police have issued their own warning.

“We want to make the public aware of [764],” said Det Ch Supt Finlay. “The threat that they pose, not just within the United Kingdom but globally, is immense.”

It is not known how Finnigan became involved in the group.

The BBC has spoken to one person who knew him well. They told us his behaviour had changed when he became involved with other extremists online.

“They shared all the horrible, awful stuff between each other. That’s when he went from being caring and loving to manipulative, toxic, controlling and sadistic,” they said.

“He never showed any guilt, he would actually boast about it with friends as if he enjoyed the suffering and found it entertaining. It was disgusting and completely inhumane.”

‘Nightmare-inducing stuff’

Becca Spinks is a US-based internet investigator who has studied the group.

“They’ll try to coerce and persuade young vulnerable people to self-harm, take a razor blade and carve their abuser’s name into their body on video,” she said.

Ms Spinks identified Finnigan as a 764 member before he was arrested. He then contacted her and, in messages seen by the BBC, he threatened to rape and kill her.

“I very quickly realised that I had kicked a really nasty hornets’ nest,” Spinks told us. “The FBI told me that this group was very violent and very dangerous. It’s horrific, nightmare-inducing stuff.”

Arrests related to 764 have been made for child abuse, kidnapping and murder in at least eight countries, including the UK.

Last year, Vincent Charlton from Gateshead, then 17, was jailed for disseminating terrorist publications, possessing documents useful to a terrorist, and making and possessing indecent images of children.

The BBC has found online that 764 is still active worldwide and has seen messages where group members boast about their exploits, sharing photos and videos of their victims.
Dark and sinister-looking images on a video still – the background is black, with what look like flames in the foreground, a pentangle and possibly a monstrous face in the middle with “764” above its eyes

Typically, the group will seek out vulnerable young girls on social media, often in communities dedicated to self-harm or mental health. They communicate with them on messaging platforms such as Discord and Telegram, often sending sexually explicit child abuse material.

A spokesperson for Discord told us that it had reported Finnegan to authorities in the US, and added that the platform was committed to addressing harmful content.

Jenna (not her real name) from Australia, was 15 when she was first targeted by 764.

For more than two years, she was threatened by members of the group.

“It was horrible,” says Jenna’s mother, who spoke to us anonymously. “We have suicide manuals that they sent to her.”

The group also sent Jenna images of child and animal abuse, and coerced her into sharing explicit pictures of herself, and self-harming on camera.

Jenna’s mother told us that the group had got her daughter to mutilate herself more and more. “Deeper. Worse. She’s covered in scars.”

Eventually, the abusers ordered Jenna to kill her family’s cat and she refused to comply.

“They wanted her to do that on a livestream. It all blew up from there. When she refused to do that, I think they realised they were losing control of her,” said her mother.

In revenge, 764 members made a fake police report, claiming that Jenna’s father had a gun – a common tactic known as “swatting”. Armed Australian police came to the house, terrifying the family.

Some of Jenna’s abusers have now been arrested and are serving prison sentences in the United States.

But others are still at large. While she has mostly managed to cut ties, Jenna continues to receive threatening messages. Her mother is still trying to get the explicit images removed from social media sites.

“I spent months being able to see that these people are able to access the worst things that you could imagine of your child. And just screaming into the void like, nobody’s listening, nobody’s taking this stuff down. How is it still up? And it’s not just my child, it’s so many kids.”

Jenna is still traumatised by her experiences with the group.

“Be really careful of who you’re talking to,” she says. “And if it happens to you, talk to someone about it.”

BBC News

A man who pushed and kicked out at police officers outside a hotel housing asylum seekers has been jailed for three years.

John Webster, 41, pleaded guilty to violent disorder after participating in the rioting “mob” at the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham, on 4 August.

The Recorder of Sheffield, Judge Jeremy Richardson KC, told him he had “wrecked” his own life at a sentencing hearing at Sheffield Crown Court.

Webster, of Hague Avenue, Rotherham, has 21 previous convictions but had gained a job as a bus driver and had recently “turned his life around”, the sentencing heard.

He is the 80th person to be sentenced for taking part in the disorder outside the hotel, South Yorkshire Police said.

Footage played to the court showed the defendant ignoring instructions from police to move, with Webster seen shouting at officers and filming the violence.

He was filmed pushing and kicking out at officers while they held shields up, the court heard.
‘Extremely frightening’

“You could have put the unhappiness of many years behind you, and life would have been quite good,” Judge Richardson said.

“You have wrecked your own life – there is no one else to blame, it is your responsibility.”

Judge Richardson said the “ignorant and violent mob” was “extremely frightening” for those in the hotel.

“The venom of racism and racially motivated violence suffused the events, from first to last,” he added.

The judge said Webster’s actions “indirectly affected” the asylum seekers and staff in the hotel, who police were aiming to protect.

“You are not to be sentenced simply for what you did as an individual, you were part of the group and you bear responsibility as a consequence,” he said.

“You are the author of your own misfortune.”

BBC News

A man who made graphic death threats to senior police during riots last summer was found to have photographs of himself wearing a swastika armband.

Jack Mason sent emails to officers saying their “throats would be sliced open”, but sent them in the name of Harry Roberts, who murdered three officers in London in the 1960s.

Liverpool Crown Court heard when the 31-year-old was arrested, officers found Nazi symbols on his phone and a meme that said “Don’t blame me, I voted for Hitler”.

Mason, of Grasmere Avenue, St Helens, was jailed for four years and four months after admitting five counts of sending threatening communications between February and August, one count of violent disorder, and possession of cannabis.

‘Pain and suffering’

The court heard Mason had also written about getting hold of guns and said that the violent thoughts he had “gave him sexual pleasure”.

In one email, sent to Merseyside Police deputy chief constable Chris Green, he wrote: “There’s something so beautiful and natural in blood, pain and suffering.”

Nardeen Nemat, prosecuting, said Mason’s mobile phone contained images including swastika flags a photograph of a rainbow flag being burned.

In one email, Mason told an officer: “I will be tasting blood even if it’s not yours.”

Miss Nemat said that in the message to DCC Green, Mason described wanting to make him watch as he mutilated Merseyside Police chief constable Serena Kennedy.
A smiling Serena Kennedy, chief constable of Merseyside Police, who has blonde hair, sits at a brown wooden desk in her black uniform with her police hat and a mug branded with Yorkshire Tea in front of her.

“I shan’t hesitate to seize such an opportunity,” he wrote.

Ms Nemat said Mason had been involved in throwing missiles after disorder flared following the Southport knife attacks, in which three young girls were killed.

He was caught after throwing items at the force in Liverpool on 3 August.

Mason was wearing a mask at the time.

The court heard he had five previous convictions for seven offences, including harassment and sending obscene and menacing messages to two police officers, for which he received a community order in 2023.

Paul Becker, defending, said that the death of Mason’s father had had a significant impact on him and his mental health, and he suffered from anxiety and depression.

Judge David Potter, who also imposed a five year Criminal Behaviour Order on Mason, said he believed he was motivated by racial hatred.

BBC News