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Stuart Randall, 55, also danced in front of a police line while waving a riot shield and smashed the front windows of two shops

A father-of-three who took a sledgehammer to cars at a garage belonging to a foreign national while the terrified owner cowered inside with his family during riots in Hull has been jailed for three years.

Stuart Randall, 55, danced in front of a police line while waving a riot shield and smashed the front windows of two shops during a day of “racist, hate-fuelled mob violence” in the city on August 3.

Randall also smashed the glass of a BMW that had contained three Romanian men who were forced out of their vehicle by an angry mob, although Hull Crown Court heard he was not directly involved in that incident.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of racially aggravated criminal damage, violent disorder, criminal damage to two shops, burglary of the O2 store and Lush, and possession of cannabis.

The court heard Randall had gone into the city centre to attend a vigil for the three children killed in the attack in Southport.

The defendant, who has an alcohol dependency, “accepted a can of cider” from someone and “that’s when things spiralled out of control,” a judge was told.

As police formed a protective line in front of a hotel known to house asylum seekers, Randall was seen “waving a police shield and behaving in an erratic manner”.

During an attack on a garage owned by a foreign national, Randall was seen smashing cars with a sledgehammer.

The owner, who was barricaded inside his own business with his children and six other people, could smell burning cars and hear threats to harm his family outside as he cowered in fear for his life, the court heard.

At one point he heard someone shout: “You bastard foreigner, come out,” prosecutor Jeremy Evans said.

Footage played in court showed Randall picking up a bar stool and using it to smash the front of a Specsavers shop, before doing the same with a fire extinguisher at Holland & Barrett. He was also seen on CCTV looting the O2 store and Lush.

In mitigation, the court heard Randall was “ashamed and disgusted by his behaviour” and “only knew what happened through watching CCTV at the police station”.

At the same court, a 64-year-old man who punched a police officer in the jaw and handed out eggs for people to throw during the Hull disorder was jailed for 18 months.

William Riley pleaded guilty to violent disorder and assaulting an emergency worker.

The court heard he was prominent at the front of a group who were confronting a police line, acting aggressively and throwing missiles.

He went on to punch an officer to the side of the jaw as he was trying to detain him.

The court heard the conviction was “a massive fall from grace” for Riley, who is involved with veterans’ charities who had attended the city centre that day to lay a wreath for the victims of the Southport stabbing.

Evening Standard

A career criminal who said he got “swept up” in the violent far-right disorder in Whitehall has been jailed for 20 months.

David Notley, 67, of High Road in Buckhurst Hill, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and a religiously aggravated public order offence after he was involved in the Enough is Enough demonstration near Downing Street on July 31.

Notley was seen striking fighting poses in front of police, surging back and forth towards officers, called them c***s and joining in anti-Muslim chants.

Prosecutor Alexander Agbamu said Daniel Thomas, known as Danny Tommo, organised the demonstration and members of the far-right responded with the seeming intention of replicating scenes seen earlier in the week across the country.

Police imposed conditions that demonstrators must remain on Richmond Terrace and the protest must end by 8.30pm.

However, the demonstration grew violent as demonstrators broke out of the area and bottles were thrown at officers.

Mr Agbamu played footage of Notley’s role in the disorder.

He said: “By way of summary, in that footage we could see Mr Notley had made his way to the front of that crowd who were confronting police.

“He struck fighting poses, surging back and forth, joined in chanting ‘you’re not English anymore’. He then helped to push another demonstrator into a police officer which precipitated a physical confrontation between police and demonstrators.

“We can see that for the duration of this clip, at least, the defendant remained at the front of the crowd.”

Judge Freya Newbery described Notley as a career thief and burglar.

In 2009 he was jailed for 20 years for his involvement in an attempt to smuggle nearly £400,000 worth of cocaine hidden in pot plants from Nicaragua to Waltham Abbey.

The 120 pot plants were found during a border inspection at Tilbury Docks.

Notley was on licence at the time of the demonstration so when he was arrested last Tuesday (August 13) he was recalled to prison.

Notley represented himself at his sentencing hearing at Inner London Crown Court on Monday (August 19).

He told the court he went to the demonstration to support the three girls who were killed in Southport.

Notley said: “I was actually already in the area that day so I hadn’t planned to go to that march. I was already in Piccadilly Circus and my phone beeped with the message about the three girls and I just went to that. I got swept up in it basically in the moment of doing it.”

He added: “The only thing I refute in the prosecutor’s observations is that I was pushing people. No way. I was pushed from behind. I would never do that sort of thing. I’m not into that sort of thing I’m nearly 70.”

Judge Newbery said: “I suspect you had fallen into the trap of believing a lot of things put on social media, wrongly, and probably done to do just that, prompt someone like you to join in.

“You didn’t think about anything, not least that you were on licence and a criminal offence would put you back in prison.”

Judge Newbery commented that it was “somewhat ironic” that Notley seems to regard himself as an asset to society given his criminal record.

While Notley did not engage in violence himself, Judge Newbery said his actions could and probably did encourage others to threaten police and engage in disorder.

“That protest descended into really horrible and sickening violent language and activities which caused fright and upset to very many ordinary law-abiding people in London,” she said.

She said violent protest cannot be tolerated by society and a severe sentence is necessary for punishment and deterrent.

He was sentenced to 20 months in prison of which he will serve at least half.
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A father-of-three who was filmed using a bar stool to smash the front of a Specsavers shop in Hull before doing the same with a fire extinguisher at a Holland & Barrett store has been jailed for three years.

Stuart Randall, 55, also looted an O2 store and a Lush shop in Hull city centre on 3 August.

Hull Crown Court heard Randall danced in front of a police line while waving a riot shield and smashed the front windows of the two shops.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of racially aggravated criminal damage, violent disorder, criminal damage to two shops, burglary of an O2 store and a Lush shop, and possession of cannabis.

The court heard Randall had gone into the city centre to attend a vigil for the three children killed in the attack in Southport.

Randall, who has an alcohol dependency, “accepted a can of cider” from someone and “that’s when things spiralled out of control,” a judge was told.

Separately, during an attack on a garage owned by a foreign national, Randall was seen smashing cars with a sledgehammer.

The owner, who was barricaded inside his own business with his children and six other people, could smell burning cars and hear threats to harm his family outside as he cowered in fear for his life, the court heard.

BBC News

Another court result to bring you – this time from the capital where a 41-year-old mother has been given a four-month suspended sentence after admitting a charge of assaulting an emergency worker during a demonstration in central London.

Video footage played to Inner London Crown Court this afternoon showed Kelly Wildego being handcuffed on the ground in Whitehall on 31 July.

Prosecutors said Wildego, of Harrow Manorway, Greenwich, shouted expletives at police officers and rushed at them after most of the violence had stopped.

Wildego admitted her conduct and expressed remorse during a police interview, prosecutor Alex Agbamu told the court.

Joseph Lord, defending, said Wildego is “wholly ashamed” of her actions and got herself arrested to be with her husband, who had been detained by police earlier.

Judge Freya Newbery handed Wildego a suspended sentence because she is a full-time carer for her 13-year-old son, who has learning difficulties.

BBC News

Some more court results to bring you this time from Manchester where a tyre fitter who pleaded guilty to violent disorder that took place at a hotel for asylum seekers in Newton Heath has been jailed for 26 months.

Lynden Parker, 26, was part of a mob of people on 31 July who threw bricks and glass bottles at the hotel, as well as an e-cigarette thrown by Parker.

A passing bus with ethnic minority passengers onboard was also surrounded and attacked, Manchester Crown Court heard.

Passing sentence, Judge Patrick Field KC said Parker appeared to have “been motivated by deeply unpleasant, ignorant and possibly extremist racist views” and brought “terror and disorder into this city”.

“By your presence as part of a mob and throwing that missile, you were encouraging and spurring on others to behave in a similar way,” the Judge Field added.

BBC news

Three more men have been jailed for taking part in violent disorder which broke out in Southport the day after three girls were stabbed to death.

The men all admitted taking part in a disturbance close to Southport mosque the day after the stabbings.

Violence was sparked by false online rumours the suspect in the Southport attack was a Muslim.

Footage played to Liverpool Crown Court showed the men throwing missiles at police and the crowd can also be heard chanting anti-Islamic slogans.

David Engleby, 29, from Southport, was jailed for two years and four months
Self-employed joiner Paul Dryhurst, 33, from Litherland, was jailed for two years
Luke Summerfield, 33, from Aston under Lyne in Greater Manchester, was jailed for two years and two months

Through their defence barristers all three men expressed their remorse at what they had done.

The court heard Dryhurst’s parents both work for the ambulance service and are “baffled” at their son’s behaviour.

Judge Watson said: “It would be wrong and misleading to look at the actions of individuals in isolation because violence feeds on itself. Events gain a momentum of their own.”

BBC News

A 32-year-old man is sentenced to two years and two months for his part in the Sunderland riots.

Dean Groenewald, of no fixed address, had previously pleaded guilty to violent disorder.

Newcastle Crown Court heard Groenewald picked up a paving brick or stone and threw it towards the police lines during a riot on 2 August, which was captured in body-worn footage.

Groenewald has 30 previous convictions including for affray, criminal damage and common assault and was on licence for a previous offence at the time of the Sunderland disorder.

Passing the sentence, Judge Paul Sloan KC said Groenewald, who is unemployed, was at “the forefront of a mob in front of the police lines” and had his hood up.

He said Groenewald had participated in “an orgy of violence, destruction and disorder” that had brought shame on the city of Sunderland.

BBC news

A 67-year-old man is jailed for 20 months after pleading guilty to violent disorder and causing religiously aggravated distress.

David Notley, of Buckhurst Hill, Epping Forest, was sentenced at Inner London Crown Court, after he shouted “you’re not English any more” at a police officers during a demonstration on Whitehall.

The court heard that members and supporters of far-right organisations took part in the protest on 31 July, and that Notley made his way to the front of the crowd and confronted police in a “fighting pose”, surging back and forth.

He helped push another demonstrator into a police officer which “precipitated a physical confrontation involving the police (and) demonstrators”, the prosecutor Alex Agbamu said, and then remained at the front of the crowd.

BBC News

Some more people have been sentenced this morning including a mother-of-six who threw a brick at police officers during a violent protest in Hartlepool.

Donna Conniff, of Alford Court in Hartlepool, was identified from CCTV and video footage from the protest in the town on 31 July.

The 40-year-old was dressed all in black and wearing sunglasses, and was also seen handing a brick to a juvenile who threw it towards police, and was part of a crowd of people who surged forwards at officers and was seen joining in with cheers as missiles were thrown.

Martin Scarborough, defending Conniff, told Teesside Crown Court that Conniff came across the protest, which had been advertised on social media, “by chance” at around 18:00 BST that evening.

Judge Francis Laird KC accepted Conniff, who earlier pleaded guilty to violent disorder, was remorseful, but said: “Your behaviour and the behaviour of others around you was truly disgraceful.”

Conniff has been jailed for two years and must serve up to half of her 24-month sentence in custody before being released on licence.

BBC News

Two more men involved in the Rotherham disorder outside a hotel housing asylum seekers have been jailed, with one now likely to miss his grandmother’s final days.

Both men were sent to serve prison sentences at His Majesty’s Pleasure after pleading guilty to the offence of violent disorder, in connection with the incident that unfolded on August 4, 2024, outside the Holiday Inn Express in the Manvers area of Rotherham, where a number of asylum seekers were being housed.

The Recorder of Sheffield, Judge Jeremy Richardson KC, told Nathan Palmer that he should be ashamed of himself for becoming involved in the disorder, resulting in his liberty being taken away as his terminally-ill grandmother is undergoing end-of-life care.

Judge Richardson also told 19-year-old Niven Matthewman that he could not comprehend why, a young person with a clean criminal record, like him would choose to involve themselves with such a ‘serious incident,’ but said he ‘must be punished’.

During the course of two separate sentencing hearings held today (August 19, 2024) The Recorder of Sheffield said both men were part of an ‘ignorant mob’ who were ‘desirous’ of attacking the police and hotel, and of ‘spreading hate’.

Speaking through their legal counsel, the two men claimed to have become involved at the last-minute, after reading about the incident on social media.

Judge Richardson said the Rotherham disorder was part of major, and wider, ‘civil unrest’ which had been ‘fostered by a form of malignancy spread by malevolent users of social media’.

“The disorder was racist in character and extremely frightening for anyone who was there,” continued Judge Richardson.

The court was told that 58 police officers, three police dogs and one police horse were injured during the course of the disorder.

“People in Rotherham were badly affected by what occurred, there was violence and threatening conduct towards police officers,” Judge Richardson said, adding that the officers were injured as they tried to protect those within the hotel, which included staff members and people who ‘were taking refuge in this country’.

The court has previously heard how the 22 members of staff present within the hotel barricaded themselves inside a kitchen, using three freezers, fearing they would die.

Sentencing of Niven Matthewman

Prosecutor, Stephanie Hollis, told the court that Niven Matthewman’s role in the disorder was comprised of two separate incidents, the first involving a police dog van containing two officers – a police constable and a sergeant – and a police dog.

The court heard how the force utilised the loud speakers attached to police dog van to ask the crowds to disperse, in the hopes of calming things down, but they were ignored by those congregating nearby. As attempts to calm the crowd failed, the police constable driving the vehicle attempted to drive away to safety, but was blocked by protesters.

Judge Richardson said of the conduct: “The driver could not move the van because people were placing themselves very deliberately in the way.”

As this was happening, Matthewman draped himself in an England flag, featuring the St George’s Cross.

“There were others who were waving the union flag. By doing as you did, that gesture, you brought shame – not only upon yourself, but upon the town of Rotherham. It was shameful conduct, given that you were then in the midst of violent disorder. The van was rocked violently, you were a part of that. The vehicle could have toppled over, injuring the occupants.”

Ms Hollis said the next part of the disorder Matthewman was seen to involve himself with came after others involved with the disorder had started a fire at the hotel.

“You were carrying a piece of wood, indeed a large piece of wood to where the police were…you dropped it and returned with a chair. You threw that towards the police. You were part of a group shouting ‘Yorkshire, Yorkshire’.”

Matthewman, aged 19, of Albert Street, Swinton, pleaded guilty to one count of violent disorder at Barnsley Magistrates’ Court on August 14, 2024.

Sentencing of Nathan Palmer

The court heard how 29-year-old Nathan Palmer’s role in the Manvers disorder related to him commandeering a police riot shield and behaving in what Judge Richardson described as an ‘extremely provocative’ way towards police officers.

Describing the situation at the time, prosecutor, Joseph Bell, said a line of officers were trying to guard the perimeter of the hotel, but were greatly outnumbered by those involved in the disorder. Body-worn footage of the incident was also shown to the corut.

He also noted that the crowd was, at that time, becoming ‘increasingly aggressive’.

Summarising Palmer’s conduct, Judge Richardson told him: “The part of the incident you were specifically seen to be involved with occurred as the hotel was under attack by the mob, but before the fire was started. You were part of a group of predominantly men.

“You were being extremely provocative towards the police who were trying to protect the occupants of the hotel, who were inside, terrified of what might happen to them.”

“An officer fell, it appears near to a small embankment. During the course of that you grabbed a police shield, which was then passed around.

“That was bad enough…but the most important point is you were part of this large mob who were becoming increasingly violent and threatening towards the police and the hotel. The moving images of what you and others did were truly frightening.”

Palmer, of New Street, Hemingfield, Barnsley, pleaded guilty to violent disorder at Barnsley Magistrates’ Court on August 14, 2024.

The court was told Palmer has six previous matters, including stalking and driving while unfit through drugs, on his criminal record and was on licence after being released from a prison sentence for drug dealing offences.

Defending, Mark Thomas, said Palmer had become involved due to ‘nosiness,’ adding that he lives a ‘short distance away’ and saw ‘reference to it on social media,’ when Judge Richardson asked him to explain Palmer’s presence at the incident.

Mr Thomas said that while Palmer does not have a partner or children, he takes an active role in his grandmother’s ‘end-of-life’ care, visiting her twice a day.

He said Palmer was distressed at the thought that his grandmother, who has dementia in addition to terminal cancer, may die while he is in custody. Judge Richardson replied: “Almost certainly, if she is in the terminal stages.”

Judge Richardson sentenced Palmer to two years, eight months in prison and told him: “It’s very sad that in the final weeks or months of your grandmother’s life you will not feature as any part of it.”

“I have no doubt that will cause your family considerable inconvenience. A new end of life plan will have to be devised because you will not be there.

“You are the author of that personal disaster – no-one else is to blame. You are to blame.”

“You’ve not only brought shame upon yourself, you’ve brought shame on your family.”
Sheffield Star