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A teenager who was in the city centre visiting Gravity Max with his friends meanwhile ended up hurling a brick at PCs

A criminology student chucked a pint of beer over a police officer during widespread disorder in Liverpool city centre.

Gerard Cooch also kicked out at riot shields as ugly scenes unfolded following the fatal stabbings of six-year-old Bebe King, seven-year-old Elsie Dot Stancombe and nine-year-old Alice Dasilva Aguiar in Southport.

Also present in central Liverpool that day was Curtis Faure, who hurled a brick towards officers. The teenager claims to have been visiting Gravity Max in Liverpool ONE with his friends when he became caught up in the trouble.

Liverpool Crown Court heard this afternoon, Thursday, that a series of incidents flared up on the Strand, Paradise Street, Whitechapel, William Brown Street, Clayton Square and Church Street on the afternoon of August 3. Nardeen Nemat, prosecuting, described how “hundreds of people were present” during the shocking disturbances, with businesses being “damaged and looted” and police officers injured.

Cooch, of Merton Road in Bootle, was seen on CCTV and mobile phone footage, which was subsequently posted to YouTube and TikTok, on Whitechapel shortly before 6.30pm. He was captured in a cap and sunglasses making “accusatory and hostile” remarks and “swearing and gesticulating” in the area, where a line of police had formed a cordon near to Queen Square Bus Station.

The “intoxicated and angry” 39-year-old then threw the contents of a pint glass he was holding over an officer and twice kicked out at shields being held by PCs. Cooch was arrested nearby around an hour later and told detectives under interview that he had been in the city centre in order to attend a “peaceful protest” but that the “atmosphere became more hostile”.

He stated that he “regretted not removing himself from the area” and was “sorry for his involvement”, having consumed three cans of cider during the course of the day. His criminal record shows seven previous convictions for 11 offences – including threatening behaviour, drunk and disorderly behaviour, production of cannabis, possession of cocaine and MDMA and breaching a suspended sentence order.

Stephen McNally, appearing on behalf of Cooch, said: “His own participation and involvement is limited, but it cannot be taken outside of the context. He is not somebody who has ever displayed any affiliation or sympathy to what might be described as far right tendencies.

“The court knows that there is an undercurrent. The background events in Southport appear to have been the catalyst behind subsequent events. They are particularly emotive. It may well be that, in that context, the court can accept his assertion that his original intention was to attend what he believed would be a peaceful protest.

“He did not take the opportunity to extricate himself from that locality. Instead, to his regret and the regret of his family, he let himself down and he let them down and one might say that he let down the other citizens of this city in how he conducted himself.

“At the very outset, he expressed remorse. References speak of a man who, despite his difficulties, has sought to better himself. This is a gentleman who is partway through a degree course in criminology and psychology. The irony of that will not be lost on the court, I am sure.

“Mr Cooch needed to take a break from his studies due to issues he was having, in the context of a series of untimely bereavements in the family. He lost his father, grandfather and another family member in a short space of time. He has had to work very hard to get back up to speed.

“It is of great regret that the psychology of the crowd appears to have overborne his ordinary character on that day. His ADHD means he is very easily caught up in what goes on around him.”

Faure was meanwhile captured in a single photograph “leaning back with a brick in his hand, about to throw it” on the Strand. The 19-year-old, of Thomas Lane in Broadgreen, handed himself in at Marsh Lane Police Station on the afternoon of August 8 after this image was circulated in the media by Merseyside Police.

He stated under interview that he “intended to go to Gravity Max when he heard about a riot on the Dock Road and wanted to see what was going on”. Faure told detectives that he had been present for up to half an hour and “picked up a single brick and threw it at police officers”, but said that the missile had not connected.

The teen added that he “could not provide an explanation why he behaved in that way” and maintained that his actions were not racially motivated, his parents originally being from South Africa. He has no previous convictions.
People protest in Liverpool, following the stabbing attacks on Monday in Southport, in which three young children were killed.

Damian Nolan, defending Faure, told the court: “His decision to became involved is completely at odds with any otherwise objective analysis of what is known of him. He was seven weeks past his 19th birthday when this incident occurred.

“It appears he had been in the city centre for a wholly legitimate purpose, to visit Gravity Max with his friends. It appears he was involved in a single episode.

“He threw a brick, but there is no evidence that it struck either a police officer or a police vehicle. There is no evidence, and it would be out of keeping with his background, that his attendance at the scene was to support any racial motive that may have lay behind the actions of others who were more central to the organisation of the events and the chaos that then ensued.

“He is a person who is of positive previous good character. He is in work and he is excelling at work. There are laudable references from his employers confirming that.

“There is every reason to assume that he will not offend again. He has been in custody since his voluntary surrender. That has been an extremely salutary lesson for him.”

Both Cooch and Faure admitted violent disorder. One woman was seen in tears in the public gallery as they were jailed for 20 months and 12 months respectively.

Sentencing, Judge Brian Cummings KC said to Cooch: “The incident occurred, plainly, in a busy public area. There is nothing on your record approaching the seriousness of what I am now dealing with.

“I accept that you have demonstrated a level of remorse. I accept that there have been some mental health factors in this case. There is plainly a better side to you.”

To Faure, the judge added: “All that is known of your involvement is represented by a single snapshot photograph showing you in the act of throwing a brick. It plainly could have caused serious injury.

“Youth and immaturity are both present in your case. You handed yourself into the police a few days later. I accept that this does genuinely display remorse on your part, and I accept that you do genuinely feel remorse for what you did.”

Liverpool Echo

Two yobs who were at the forefront of the shocking violent disorder in Hartlepool have been jailed for more than five years.

Ben Judge and Aaron Bradshaw, both 28, were “persistent participants” in scenes of mob violence and attacks on police in Murray Street on the evening of Wednesday, July 31.

Both were filmed hurling missiles at riot officers on police body worn cameras, social media footage and drone images.

Rachel Masters, prosecuting at Teesside Crown Court, described how Judge, who covered his face, threw bricks several time at police and approached officers aggressively with a brick in each hand.

He was also part of a group that surged at the police line.

Judge, who at the time was on a suspended sentence for possession of a blade, was arrested around a week later after a police appeal.

Bradshaw, who lives on Murray Street, also “got as close as possible” to the police and was captured on footage bare chested and wearing a black Balaclava-like mask.

He also threw objects at police and at one point was armed with a cosh.

Ms Masters said: “The defendant continues kicking out at officers and throwing items at them.”

He continued even after being hit on the leg with a police baton and only retreated after receiving a broken arm.

Both men have numerous previous convictions and pleaded guilty to violent disorder at an earlier hearing in the magistrates’ court.

The court heard how the disorder followed a so-called protest advertised on social media which grew to around 200 people and had started to turn violent by 7.30pm.

Stephen Constantine, mitigating, for Judge, of Farr Walk, Hartlepool, had been out with a friend that night when he came across the disorder and became involved on “impulse”.

He said Judge was “embarrassed and ashamed” and apologised for his actions but was “realistic” about the outcome.

Gary Wood, for Bradshaw, added: “The defendant accepts that his conduct on the footage was shameful.”

Judge was jailed for three years and Bradshaw for two years and eight months.

Judge Francis Laird told them: “This was a widespread incident involving large scale acts of violence towards both people and property.

“The level of aggression towards the police was shocking.”

So far seven people have been jailed for their part in the disorder.

Hartlepool Mail

He was recorded shouting ‘paedo’ and ‘Allah, Allah, who the **** is Allah’

A man has become the first person to be jailed over a protest in Nottingham after admitting to punching an Asian man and chanting racist insults.

Paul Dixon, 35, was recorded shouting “p**do” and “Allah, Allah, who the **** is Allah” while attending a protest in Nottingham on August 3 before he punched an unknown Asian man during an altercation.

The railway safety supervisor, of Broadwood Road in Bestwood, Nottingham, pleaded guilty at Nottingham Magistrates’ Court to the charge of using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour and was jailed for four months. After the defendant was identified by police from a YouTube video, he was arrested on August 14 and was found in possession of cannabis, which he also pleaded guilty to.

Sentencing Dixon, district judge Sunil Khanna said: “This incident escalated in violence. I also have to bear in mind that it did not get any worse but there was a chance it could have.”

On Saturday, August 3, far-right and anti-immigrant protestors gathered in Old Market Square, as part of UK-wide disorder resulting from the killing of three young girls in Southport on July 29. They were opposed by counter-demonstrators who grouped together at the Brian Clough statue, with the two groups having to be separated by a line of Nottinghamshire Police officers.

Police said 15 people were arrested and eight charged following the protests, but more arrests have been made in the days following the incident.

Nottingham Post

A father-of-one who poured a can of cider over a police officer during a protest in Weymouth has been jailed for 21 months.

Kevin Searle, 40, of Weymouth, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and assault by beating of an emergency worker during the demonstration on 4 August.

The court heard Searle had been fishing during the day, drank six cans of cider and while walking home he “heard the noises of the protest” and “decided to join in”.

Searle has previously appeared in court 32 times for 52 offences, magistrates were told.

Defence solicitor Richard Martin said Searle “cried” when he saw footage of himself at the protest.

Judge William Mousley KC said there was “no lawful reason” for Searle’s behaviour.

He said: “You were at the front of the group for much of the time, one of those leading the disorder, gesturing in an aggressive manner, you pushed and shoved at police and you threw a can of drink towards them.”

BBC News

The teenager squared up to an old man and kicked another during scenes of violence on Church Street

A teenager went out for a meal in Liverpool city centre but got drunk and squared up to an old man, kicked a shopper and “gestured towards his penis” on a busy street.

George Clements became embroiled in scenes of violence on Church Street only weeks after he had walked free from court for stealing and crashing a van while under the influence of drink and drugs.

Liverpool Crown Court heard today, Thursday, that a series of incidents flared up on the Strand, Paradise Street, Whitechapel, William Brown Street and Clayton Square on the afternoon of August 3 following the fatal stabbings of six-year-old Bebe King, seven-year-old Elsie Dot Stancombe and nine-year-old Alice Dasilva Aguiar in Southport. Nardeen Nemat, prosecuting, described how “hundreds of people were present” during the shocking disturbances, with businesses being “damaged and looted” and police officers injured.

Amid this disorder, Clements was captured on mobile phone footage near to a shop on Church Street which had been targeted by louts. The 18-year-old – of Egerton Street in New Brighton, Wirral – was shown with a brown scarf covering his face and “aggressively approaching” an older male with grey hair who was carrying a shopping bag.

He then turned his attention to a “male with an olive skin tone”, hitting out at his hand before being ushered away by another man. The teen however “broke free” and confronted the same victim again, kicking him to the area of his hip in what was said to have been a “racially motivated” attack.

Clements thereafter “gestured towards his penis” and “made a masturbation gesture”. He and another man then ran towards the older complainant, sparking other members of the public to intervene.

The thugs were then seen running away as sirens were heard in the background of the video. Clements was identified after this footage – which showed a child in a wheelchair in the vicinity on the violence – was shared on social media, leading to his arrest at his home address on August 9.

He has one previous conviction, being handed a 12-month imprisonment suspended for two years on May 28 this year for dangerous driving, aggravated vehicle taking, failing to stop after an accident, drink driving, drug driving and driving without a licence and insurance. This came after he took his step dad’s van while drunk and high on cocaine and cannabis and smashed the vehicle into parked cars, mounted the pavement and narrowly avoided hitting a pedestrian then collided with a fence, a gas main and a telegraph pole.

Julian Nutter, defending Clements, told the court: “He comes from a good, hard working family. The family are here in court today and are deeply distressed that their dear and loved son should commit this sort of offence. He too is ashamed for having brought all of this on the family.”

Clements’ counsel said of his suspended sentence: “All of that arose from a deterioration in his mental health, which occurred as a result of an illness in his little brother which was believed to be terminal. It was around that time that he became destabilised.

“There is no background of civil disorder or racial violence on his part. What we see is certainly not an individual in an organising or leading role, rather a young fool acting as an aggressive yob towards members of the public.

“This being Liverpool, those members of the public are not crying violets who shied away from him. We see them standing up to him. His general movement is one of retreat, because people on that street are driving him off.

“He did not go into town to participate in these unfortunate events. He went for a meal and became drunk. Things kicked off. He got drawn in, being the young fool he is, and acted in the reprehensible manner he did. He is not part of the looting. What we can see is disorderly behaviour.

“In the background, there is a history of mental trauma. He deeply regrets this incident. He is ashamed of himself and what he has brought on his family.

“He had taken alcohol. This was out of character. This was an occasion where mass hysteria had broken out as a result of the tragic issues involving those children.”

But Judge Brian Cummings KC said: “I cannot accept the description of mass hysteria. There was grief on the part of those directly and indirectly affected by the terrible matters in Southport.

“Separate from that, there is the mass disorder of yobs attacking people’s places of work, the police and members of the public. I cannot accept either of them being described as mass hysteria.”

Clements admitted affray and breaching a suspended sentence order. He nodded and smiled after he was jailed for two years, then waved to his supporters in the public gallery as he was led down to the cells.

Sentencing, Judge Cummings added: “It would be wrong for me to view what you did in isolation from its wider context. That is a period of national disorder, to which you contributed.

“The incident occurred in a busy public area. You, by your own admission, were under the influence of alcohol. I am satisfied that you exhibited hostility to one man in particular on the basis of his race.

“You are still only 18. I certainly consider that you are well short of adult maturity. That is certainly how you present to me. I do accept that your involvement was relatively short lived and may have been impulsive.”

Liverpool Echo

More than 1,100 people now arrested over far-right violence, with almost 650 charged, say police chiefs

A 15-year-old boy has become the first person to be charged with riot following recent disorder in several cities.

Prosecutors said the teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, would appear at South Tyneside Youth Court.

Rioting carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison – double that of violent disorder.

He joins a 20-year-old involved in the Southport riot, as well as one of the thugs who attacked a Black man in Manchester, who are also facing jail.

Tom Neblett, 20, from Southport, was jailed for 30 months on Thursday after scaling a van and throwing bricks and other projectiles at police.

Meanwhile, Joseph Ley from Stockport, was among a large group of white males who attacked a Black man in Manchester city centre on 3 August.

The 30-year-old is being sentenced for violent disorder at Manchester Crown Court, along with two other rioters.

On Thursday, the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) said 1,127 people had been arrested so far, with 648 charged, following the days of violence across England and Northern Ireland.

20-year-old who climbed onto van and threw brick at police jailed for 30 months

A 20-year-old who climbed on to a van and repeatedly launched projectiles at police officers in Southport has been locked up for 30 months.

Tom Neblett, aged 20, attended a vigil for the previous day’s stabbing at a dance class in which three girls were killed, but he later joined a 1,000-strong group who “without any evidence or justification” attacked a nearby mosque and then police officers who gathered in response, Liverpool Crown Court heard.

Neblett threw a brick at the passenger side window of a police carrier while the driver was still inside before colleagues in riot gear removed him as he shielded his head with his hands.

He was also seen on CCTV footage at the “very forefront” of the missile throwing as he picked up a smoke flare and hurled it towards the line of officers. He later scaled a white van and repeatedly threw more bricks and pieces of paving slabs at the police carrier and officers, the court heard.

Judge Dennis Watson KC told Neblett that a pre-sentence report had shown “a different side to you, the yob who was throwing missiles repeatedly” but he added: “The effect of your actions will have been to encourage others to have been involved and do likewise. Those actions cannot be viewed in isolation and should not be underestimated.”

The Independent

A Hatton Garden jeweller has been sentenced to eight months in prison after he committed racially aggravated public order offences at a demonstration near Downing Street in Whitehall last month.

Russ Cooke, 66, of Islington, made offensive remarks to officers, and pushed a metal barrier towards them.

He had been drinking with friends in central London on 31 July, when he decided to join in with the disorder and “got carried away”, Inner London Crown Court heard.

Cooke, who the court heard is “deeply ashamed” of his behaviour, admitted the three racially aggravated public order offences at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Monday.

Judge Benedict Kelleher said the jeweller’s actions had been motivated by his hostility towards a particular group, and added that “only a custodial sentence can be justified.”

BBC News

As the courts dispatch swift justice to those involved in the race riots earlier this month, Zoë Beaty observes the grim scenes being played out in decaying towns where few believe this could never happen again

Within 10 minutes it’s over. Another fate is sealed. The process is simple and already repetitive: the defendant, this time wiry apprentice electrician Declan Dixon, 22, wearing prison-issue grey tracksuit bottoms, is brought up from the cells to court number 7.

As the charges are read – violence disorder, possession of cocaine – he bows his head. A weary defence lawyer makes a case for bail – Dixon, who pleaded guilty to all offences, would like, he says, to visit his mum in Wigan, to say goodbye.

Dixon cuts a pitiful figure standing in the dock, which is covered with a thick layer of dust. He nods earnestly in the direction of the judge as the appeal is made. He accepts he’s going to jail, his lawyer explains to the court, “because he’s been seen on TV” taking part in the Hartlepool riots on 31 July. But, just like the scores of others shuffling through the court this week pleading for a break, he finds that the judge is unwilling to pander.

Dixon leaves the courtroom and is escorted back to the cells to await sentencing. Others are receiving 20 months for similar offences committed during the riots that spread across the country earlier this month. The chances of him sitting in his mum’s kitchen any time soon are slim.

The backdrop to this sorry scene is Teesside Magistrates’ Court, an antiquated building close to a downtrodden city centre. The riots that erupted across the country on 29 July might have been quashed for now, but here the process of delivering justice has only just begun. More than 50 people have been hauled before a judge here in the past week; on 6 August, 27 were dealt with in one day.

It’s a snapshot of a grim wider picture. The police have now arrested more than 1,000 people involved in the racially motivated violence that began at the end of last month. On Tuesday, the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) confirmed that 575 people had been charged, and warned that there were “hundreds” more to come in a crackdown that is likely to last for weeks to come.

The violence being documented in the courts has in some cases been unprecedented and grotesque. In Rotherham this week, a 60-year-old man was sentenced to two years and eight months for his part in the terrifying violence that took place outside a hotel used to house asylum seekers.

Over in Chester, a 53-year-old woman who lived a “quiet, sheltered life” was jailed for 15 months after she admitted posting a threatening Facebook message that stated: “Don’t protect the mosques, blow the mosque up with the adults in it.”

Middlesbrough has also seen cases that have become synonymous with the heinous disorder that began in the days that followed the stabbing of three young girls at a dance studio in Southport.

Last week, Stacey Vint was sentenced to 20 months in prison for pushing a burning wheelie bin into a row of police officers. On Monday, Thomas Rogers appeared here, too. He was described as “the idiot with a hoover” by the landlord of a house the 22-year-old smashed up with a vacuum cleaner.

The court heard that he threw bricks at police officers and told them that he hoped their children would be raped as he was taken into custody after the riots on 4 August. His young defence lawyer, Tabitha Buck, told the court that Rogers was “overwhelmed” by the stabbings in Southport, “and by what he says is a lack of reaction from the police”.

The cases keep on coming – in the courtroom, horrific Islamaphobic slurs are read out in monotone as cases are set out, and lawyers wrangle over video replays of defendants shouting “We want our country back.” Those sat in the dock hear their words read back to them. Adrenaline-fuelled bravado now drained, some defendants look mildly ashamed, at least while in front of a judge. The majority I see plead guilty, meekly accepting their involvement and the punishment to come.

In the public gallery, however, it’s sometimes not so quiet. Members of one family, who have come to get a glimpse of their 18-year-old grandson emerging from custody, are visibly upset. “This doesn’t happen to families like ours,” they say as the five-minute hearing ends. “We’re a good family.”

There are small gatherings of people waiting outside on the court steps, too, and a few low-key disturbances have happened inside the court. “There was a report of one guy shouting from the public gallery,” says Paul Doney of the CPS. “He’s now been charged for his own involvement in the riots.”

It’s mostly the same sort of people sitting in the public gallery, I’m told; people wearing tracksuits and flip-flops to court – those who “know their way around already”, says Alex Storey, a reporter for the local North News and Pictures. He was on the front line of the riots across the North East, which hit Hartlepool, Sunderland and Middlesbrough in quick succession. Since then he’s been talking to victims, and sitting on countless press benches in courts across the region.

It’s been 12 years since I too was a local news reporter on this beat, but Teesside Magistrates’ Court is exactly as I remember it. The late-1980s turquoise flooring; polystyrene squares that cover the ceiling between strip lighting; the squarks of seagulls outside comically echoing in clinical corridors. In the courtrooms, magistrates sit at worn desks. Opposite the plastic blue seats in the public gallery, graffiti is etched into the wooden balcony railings.

The time warp extends to the town itself. I notice only small changes, and none for the better. The public library opposite the courts now has boarded-up windows. Shops that once dominated the high street, such as Debenhams and House of Fraser, are today dormant and decaying, and there are empty and half-empty baggies of drugs scattered on the paths.

The fountain outside the Crown Court, in the regenerated university area, has been shut off due to a rat problem, I’m told. “There’s no ‘levelling up’ here, no matter what they tell you,” a court usher says as we chat in the foyer. “That’s the problem.”

The area has a long, deeply entrenched history of neglect. The once thriving steelworks felt the sharp end of Margaret Thatcher’s policy of privatisation in the late 1980s, as a 170-year-old industry that, despite several sales and attempts to save it, has since seen nothing but decline.

The final closure, in 2015, led to a 13 per cent rise in unemployment – mainly among predominantly white, working-class men over the age of 50. Out of work, many were consigned to the benefits system. Multigenerational unemployment, along with a mood of resentment and frustration, was left to fester by governments of both colours. Earlier this year, a report by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation showed that Middlesbrough had the highest rate of child poverty in the North East – almost half.

The other cases in court this week add to the picture of a town trapped in a downward spiral, where opportunities are few and people to blame are many. One case includes a woman facing a charge for a £13.15 theft from Morrisons “because she was hungry”, a defence lawyer tells the court. Theft related to drug use is a common theme.

I sit with Leanne, from Hartlepool, as she waits nervously for her partner, who has been on remand for eight weeks for common assault. She says his crime was related to complex mental illness – yet he’s been waiting for two years for therapy.

“Things are hard,” she says, quickly adding that neither her partner nor any of her family had anything to do with the riots. “It’s scary,” she continues. “I’m scared to let my kids out. I don’t want them to grow up like this. I’m scared for myself, even.”

Take a 10-minute walk from the courts, and it’s clear why. Garnet Road – an area just off the city centre, where there’s a large Asian community – was “decimated” during the riots, Storey says. “Cars have been smashed, front windows have been smashed.” Vehicles were also set alight, and curtains ripped from front rooms to be used as tinder.

“We thought the court was a goner,” one usher tells me. “They came right past. All the university buildings [five minutes’ walk away] were smashed up, too.”

The court survived, but it’s now being put through its paces by prime minister Keir Starmer’s rapid sentencing plan. In full swing in Teesside and across many other deprived northern towns, it seems to be working, albeit aided by a significant amount of elbow grease from exhausted court employees. Many rioters are being sentenced within four days of their plea hearing, a process that Doney tells me would usually take around four weeks.

“Starmer wanted the courts open 24 hours – well he nearly had that last night,” a security guard at the magistrates’ court tells me. He finished work at 11.55pm the night before; the van drivers, ferrying prisoners between cells, “didn’t get off until 3am”, he says. “There’s nowhere to take the prisoners. Everywhere is full.”

So far, UK courts such as this one have sent a robust message – that racism and violent disorder won’t be tolerated. For now, the rioters are off the streets, many beginning fair, hefty sentences in overcrowded prisons or languishing in full-to-the-brim police custody. But these short hearings can’t give answers to why the story is unlikely to end there.

“They’re all looking for someone to blame,” a man in his mid-fifties, who doesn’t want to be named, tells me outside the court. “It was inevitable. People are p***** off – for the wrong reasons, or with the wrong people, like, but they’re p***** off. They don’t trust the government or the media. They think it’s all someone else’s fault.”

You can remove the thugs from the street, he’s essentially saying, but the conditions remain for misguided anger to froth over into violence once more.

Today, locals in the surrounding streets are busy trying to fix things up and erase some of the damage caused to their community. The lists for court hearings are still growing in Middlesbrough, as they are in neighbouring Newton Aycliffe, and further north in South Tyneside, Sunderland and Newcastle.

“They’ll keep coming,” Doney says. And the pressure on the court officials, prison staff and police will keep building. But, however busy the justice system will be for the foreseeable future, the real work for those taking stock hundreds of miles away in Westminster is just beginning.

The Independent

A 15-year-old boy and two women have pleaded guilty to violent disorder following unrest in Bristol city centre.

They were among protesters who clashed with police on 3 August. The boy appeared at Bristol Youth Court on Thursday and will be sentenced on 3 September by District Judge Lynne Matthews. He was not remanded in custody.

Elly-Jayne Cox, 33, of Bishopsworth, Bristol, and Lisa Bishop, 38, of Lawrence Weston, Bristol, appeared before Bristol Magistrates’ Court earlier.

Both women pleaded guilty to a charge of violent disorder and were remanded into custody by District Judge Joanna Dickens.

Prosecutor Paul Ricketts told the court video footage showed Cox shouting at officers and being “racist in tone”.

“There’s video footage where the defendant can be seen shouting at officers, many of those racist in tone, the defendant can be seen on footage at the front of the group shouting at officers,” Mr Ricketts said.

“When it moved to Redcliffe Way the defendant can be seen shouting at officers.

“She can be seen with a can which it looks like she throws at the opposing group.”

When asked if she pleaded guilty or not guilty Cox replied “Yeah I’m guilty”.

She and Bishop will appear before Bristol Crown Court on Friday to be sentenced.

Bradley McCarthy, 34, of Knowle, was charged with violent disorder overnight and is due in magistrates on Thursday.

Officers have so far arrested 28 people and charged 15 in connection with the unrest on 3 August.

Avon and Somerset Police said its investigation into the disorder was continuing it has released images of people officers wanted to identify.

BBC News

A man who threw stones and rocks at police during a violent protest in Middlesbrough has been jailed.

More than 1,000 people were estimated to have taken to the streets in the town on 4 August, days after similar violence erupted in Hartlepool, Teesside Crown Court heard.

Eight officers were injured in Middlesbrough and houses and cars were damaged, prosecutors said.

Jonathan Ambrose, 33, admitted violent disorder and was jailed for two and a half years. Five more men are due to be sentenced later.

Prosecutor Rachel Masters said a “peaceful protest” in Middlesbrough was advertised on social media, with crowds gathering at the Cenotaph in Linthorpe Road at about 13:45 BST.

She said a march set off towards the town centre and was initially peaceful, but as the marchers passed Clarendon Road an object was thrown at them and the atmosphere become “heated”, Ms Masters said.

Police quickly formed a line to stop protestors getting into Clarendon Road which “numerous people attempted to break through”, the court heard.

“From that point onwards it became violent,” Ms Masters said, adding missiles were thrown at officers, bins set on fire and cars and windows smashed.

Drug-addict Ambrose, of Letitia House drug treatment centre in Middlesbrough, was seen at about 19:00 near Parliament Road throwing rocks and stones at police officers, Ms Masters said.

In mitigation, his lawyer Tabitha Buck said he had gone to see what was happening and made the “stupid mistake” of getting involved which he now regretted.

Ambrose, who had multiple previous convictions including for causing racially aggravated harm or distress, was jailed for 30 months having also admitted possessing cannabis.

BBC News