Archive

Tag Archives: riots

Paul Smith was jailed for 22 months following violent disorder in Middlesbrough

A rioter pushed a bin towards a police cordon after violence erupted at a far-right protest.

Paul Smith, 24, was locked up for 22 months at Teesside Crown Court on Monday, following riots in Middlesbrough on Sunday, August 4. The court heard Smith was seen on Ayresome Street among a group of males who were trying to set alight a Biffa bin.

The Middlesbrough defendant was seen with a lighter before pushing the bin into the police cordon. A second bin, a household wheelie bin, was also set alight and pushed into the police cordon.

The St Catherine’s Court defendant was jailed for 22 months for violent disorder. Teesside Live previously reported how protestors stormed Middlesbrough town centre in August after a week of violence across the country in protests organised by far-right and anti-immigration groups.

Cars were torched, windows were smashed and police were attacked in the shameful violence. In recent weeks, countless rioters have been jailed on Teesside with police still tracing suspects.

Following the troubles, Cleveland Police launched an investigation to identify individuals suspected of being involved. Codenamed Operation Acorn is led by detectives in the force’s homicide and major enquiry team.

Gazette Live

A rioter who attacked a police station with metal poles during disorder has been jailed for three years and four months.

Brian Gilby, 27, was part of a mob which targeted the police office on Waterloo Place, Sunderland, during widespread mayhem on 2 August, Newcastle Crown Court heard.

Gilby, of Hendon Burn Avenue in Sunderland, also looted a vape shop, prosecutors said.

He admitted rioting with judge Tim Gittins saying he had brought “shame on the city”.

‘Abhorrent behaviour’

Hundreds of people were involved in disorder which broke out across the city after anti-immigration protests turned violent, prosecutor Michael Bunch said.

Police officers were repeatedly attacked with missiles, with four needing hospital treatment.

Businesses were also looted, vehicles damaged and windows smashed, during the unrest.

Gilby was seen on CCTV at the forefront of a group attacking a police office with metal poles and passing weapons to others to use, Mr Bunch said.

He also wielded a fire extinguisher at the building while a neighbouring citizens’ advice office burned after being set alight by rioters which was an “irony”, judge Gittins said.

Gilby then went to a looted vape shop and helped himself to as many products as his “tracksuit bottoms could hold”, the judge said, adding that there was “no legitimacy” for the “abhorrent behaviour”.

‘Encouraged others’

In mitigation, Nick Lane said Gilby had been celebrating a friend’s birthday and was “drawn” into the disorder after “stumbling” across it.

He said the father-of-three, who had missed important family milestones while on remand, was “deeply embarrassed and ashamed” by his actions.

Judge Gittins said he was part of an “orgy of mindless destruction” which “shocked, appalled” and caused fear to “right-thinking” people.

He said those present “inflamed” others to take part in the disorder.

The judge said he acknowledged jailing Gilby would have an affect on his family but told him: “You weren’t thinking of them when you took part in this disgraceful behaviour.”

BBC News

A rioter who threw bricks at police and a man who filmed disorder and tried to intervene in the arrest of a protestor have been jailed.

Liam Doeg and Ian Kirtley, both from Sunderland, were involved in multiple incidents after anti-immigration protests turned violent in the city on 2 August, Newcastle Crown Court heard.

Doeg, 33, repeatedly attacked police and looted a vape shop. Kirtley, 36, was part of a group that tried to attack a mosque and encouraged people to attack officers as he filmed them on his phone.

Doeg, who admitted rioting and burglary, was jailed for three years and eight months and Kirtley, who pleaded guilty to violent disorder, for one year and nine months.

Violence erupted across Sunderland City Centre at about 16:00 BST after protestors gathered in the wake of the killing of three young girls in Southport, prosecutor Omar Ahmad said.

Four police officers required hospital treatment, shops were looted, windows were smashed, a Citizens Advice office was set on fire and a neighbouring police station was “ransacked”, the court heard

Doeg, of Poplar House in Sunderland, was “at the front” of a crowd throwing bricks at a line of police officers in Keel Square at about 19:30 BST and about an hour later was part of a group that sprayed police with a fire extinguisher and hurled multiple missiles, the court heard.

He also pushed a wheelie bin at police, threw a parasol and helped a group thrust a picnic bench at officers, Mr Ahmad said.

At about 21:30 BST he entered a vape shop which had already been looted and stole multiple products from a smashed cabinet, the court was told.

Kirtley, of Hylton Road in Sunderland, was draped in an England flag when he was part of a group that went to attack a mosque in St Mark’s Road but they were thwarted by a line of officers, Mr Ahmad said.

‘Ferocious attacks’

A short while later he intervened in the arrest of man on Hylton Road, pulling him free so he could escape from a horse-mounted police officer, the court heard.

Later Kirtley filmed people throwing stolen beer kegs at police and indicated a bin to protestors to be used as a weapon.

After being arrested, Kirtley claimed he had gone simply to “wave a flag” and was pointing to the bin to tell people not to use it.

In a statement read to the court, Northumbria Police Chief Constable Vanessa Jardine said the riot had been “appalling” with officers “ferociously” attacked.

She said the force had requested more than £1.5m from the Home Office to help pay for police operations in the aftermath.

‘Brought shame’

In mitigation for Doeg, the court heard he was drunk at the time and had a history of alcohol addiction.

The court was also told he was sorry for his actions.

Kirtley, meanwhile, was “vulnerable and easily influenced by others,” his barrister said.

Judge Tim Gittins said Doeg, Kirtley and others had brought shame on Sunderland, having gathered in large numbers for “no justifiable reason whatsoever”.

He said they carried out an “orgy of mindless destruction” including “serious acts of violence towards person and property”.

Judge Gittins said Kirtley had also brought “equal shame” to the England flag he carried through part of the disorder.

BBC News

Two men have been handed jail terms for violent disorder during this summer’s riots.

Unrest spread in Middlesbrough on 4 August, during a protest which started at the town’s cenotaph.

Akheel Khan, 24, of Wheatley Close in Middlesbrough, who pleaded guilty to violent disorder, appeared at Teesside Crown Court and was sentenced to 15 months.

Meanwhile, Ashley Ferguson, 34, of Somerset Street in Middlesbrough, who was charged with a number of offences including violent disorder, was also sentenced to 30 months in jail.

Ferguson was handed 30 months for violent disorder and 12 months, to be served concurrently, for burglary.

A charge of possession of an offensive weapon in a public place was left to remain on file.

BBC News

Ricky Whitbread was filmed on police bodycam footage making threatening gestures towards officers

A 33-year-old man from Bristol has become the 35th person to be sentenced for their involvement in the Bristol riots. Ricky Whitbread, from Brenty, has been handed a suspended prison sentence after launching missiles at police officers during the disorder in August.

Whitbread pleaded guilty to the charge of violent disorder and was given an 18-month suspended sentence at Bristol Crown Court yesterday, Thursday, October 31.

During the incident outside the Mercure Hotel on Saturday, August 3, Whitbread was filmed on police bodycam footage making threatening gestures towards officers and hurling an object.

Judge James Patrick said he had been involved in a “disgusting and very ugly ordeal” on Saturday 3 August adding that he had multiple opportunities to leave but decided not to.

Detective Inspector Tom Herbert said: “Ricky Whitbread’s behaviour throughout the disorder that day was shameful and he has rightly appeared before the court for sentencing.”

He is now the 35th person to be sentenced for their involvement in the disorder on August 3.

Bristol Post

A 13-year-old girl charged over her involvement in the UK riots has admitted violent disorder, stealing four bottles of Lucozade and cash.

The youngster admitted violent disorder in County Road, in the Walton area of Liverpool on August 3 and two other charges involving theft of the energy drink and money from Go Local Extra in nearby Delamore Street on the same date.

The girl, dressed in a blue tracksuit and trainers, appeared before Liverpool Youth Court and the magistrates ordered a pre-sentence report to be prepared.

She was remanded on unconditional bail to appear for sentence before a District Judge on November 26.

The riots were stoked as misinformation about the perpetrator of the Southport stabbings circulated online – claiming, falsely, that he was a Muslim asylum seeker and giving a fake name.

It was shared by a number of high-profile far right figures online and a Russian-affiliated ‘news’ website.

In early August Liverpool was beset by a group of about 100 thugs who set fire to bins, damaged businesses and buildings and threw missiles at police on County Road, Liverpool.

Spellow Library was also torched during the violent scenes.

The rioting came after the murder of three young girls – Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine.

The three girls had been attending the summer holiday club at the Hart Space Community Centre, in Southport, when they were stabbed on July 29.

Eight other children and two adults were also seriously injured.

According to data collated by the PA news agency, more than 600 people were charged over the Southport disorder.

Of these, 75 are children under the age of 18 – 13 per cent of the total.

The attack and subsequent rioting prompted King Charles to express his ‘profound shock’ and cut into his holiday to Balmoral, in Scotland, to visit the Merseyside seaside town.

Daily Mail

A man has been jailed for violent disorder during a riot in the summer.

Paul Sizer, 40, from Middlesbrough, was sentenced to 27 months in prison at Teesside Crown Court after admitting his part in the unrest on 4 August.

The disorder had spread from an afternoon protest at the town’s cenotaph, and was described by officers at the time as “staggering”.

Cleveland Police believes 143 suspected offenders have yet to be identified.

The riot was one of many that took place across the UK following the deaths of three young girls who were stabbed during a dance workshop in Southport.

BBC News

A man who threw rocks at police during a riot in Staffordshire in the summer, telling one officer he would “bite his face off”, has been jailed for three years.

Martin McCluskey was filmed verbally abusing the officer before footage also showed him throwing missiles at officers, during trouble in Tamworth in August.

The 60-year-old, of Manor Road, Tamworth, previously admitted violent disorder and two counts of assaulting an emergency worker, at Stafford Crown Court.

Asst Ch Con Stuart Ellison, of Staffordshire Police, said officers faced “acts of mindless criminality and violence” in the riot, during which petrol bombs were thrown and attempts made to torch a hotel housing asylum seekers.

BBC News

A teenage girl said she took part in a riot outside a hotel that housed asylum seekers to “impress her crush”.

The 16-year-old, who cannot be named due to her age, “tagged along” to the scene of the unrest at the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham, on 4 August.

The girl later admitted violent disorder and said she had picked up stones and thrown them towards police “in an act of stupidity”.

At Sheffield Youth Court on Wednesday, she was handed a 12-month intensive referral order and told to pay £111 in costs.

The court was told that while the girl was filmed throwing “stones or rubble” there had been no evidence to suggest the missiles hit or injured anyone.

Helen White, defending, said her client accepted going to the riot but denied being motivated by racism.

“It was nothing more than following a boy to the scene, she wanted to impress him, she had a bit of a crush on him,” Ms White said.

“She didn’t link the consequences of her behaviour with the actual impact it could have on the victims.

“It’s fair to say immaturity played a huge part here.”

The teen had no previous convictions and “bitterly regrets” her involvement, Ms White said.

The girl, who is the first female to be sentenced in connection with the Manvers riot, told the judge: “I’m not going to do anything like that ever again.”

Passing sentence, Judge Marcus Waite told her to “stay out of trouble”.

BBC News

Two people have been jailed today, Friday 25 October, for Violent Disorder in Liverpool city centre and Southport.

Daniel Wilson, 19, of Birchen Road, Halewood, (above left) was jailed for one year and eight months for Violent Disorder (city centre) and Christopher Carney, 33, of Town Lane, Southport (above right) was jailed for two years and five months for Violent Disorder (Southport).

In addition two more people have been charged and a teenager arrested in connection with the ongoing investigations.

Brian Spencer, 40, of Lytham Road, Southport has been charged with Violent Disorder in Southport and Racially aggravated Public Order (in connection with a separate matter). Spencer has been bailed to appear at Liverpool Magistrates Court on Wednesday 20 November

A 16-year-old boy from Banks has been charged with Violent Disorder in Southport and Possession of Class B drugs. He has been conditionally bailed to appear at Merseyside Youth Court on Tuesday 12 November.

Another 16-year-old boy from Southport has been arrested on suspicion of Violent Disorder in Southport and also been conditionally bailed.

This brings the total arrests made so far to 139, with 96 people charged and 78 people sentenced to a total of 164 years and five months.

If you have any information about the disorder in Merseyside, you can contact us via Public Portal (mipp.police.uk) or anonymously via Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Our latest gallery can be found here: CCTV appeal to help identify 74 people as part of investigation into violent disorder in Merseyside | Merseyside Police.

Merseyside Police