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A man who “barrelled into” a police officer during a night of protests has pleaded guilty to assault.

Ryan Wheatley, 40, was one of two men arrested in Southampton on Wednesday as he took part in an anti-immigration protest, which was outnumbered by up to 400 people who gathered and chanted “racists go home”.

Wheatley, of Malvern Close, Fair Oak, admitted at Southampton Magistrates’ Court to a charge of assault by beating.

He was remanded in custody to be sentenced at Southampton Crown Court on Monday.

Leah Dillon, prosecuting, told the court the defendant had attended the protest wearing a mask and a hooded top with an England flag draped over his shoulders.

She described how he had been spotted by Sgt Rob Perry attempting to run at the counter-demonstrators who had no police protection at the time.

“He went towards them, he was running towards them, this was perceived as an attempt to engage them in violence,” she said.

Ms Dillon said “he ran straight into” Sgt Perry who used an incapacitant spray before arresting him.

Wheatley accepted in an interview that he had “barrelled into the officer”, the court was told.

The prosecutor read a statement from Sgt Perry in which he said: “I was very concerned about his intention should he be given the chance to interact with the group.”

Sgt Perry described the defendant as a “very large male” and recalled that he sprayed him “because of the sheer size of him – I felt it was the safest way to control him”.

Barry Keel, defending, said Wheatley had expressed remorse for his actions and accepted he had “let his family down”.

He added the defendant had a history of drug problems.

Mr Keel told the court Wheatley read about the protest on Reddit, and his concern was “about illegal immigration rather than immigration per se”.

He said the defendant had been given the England flag by another protester and had left the other demonstration because “he was concerned and upset about being called a racist or a Nazi”.

The demonstration in Southampton on Wednesday followed a week of disturbances in parts of England and Northern Ireland after the fatal stabbing of three girls in Southport – with unrest fuelled by misinformation online.

Police have said the majority who attended the protest in Southampton were “peaceful and respectful”.

A second man, aged 18 from Eastleigh, was arrested on suspicion of attempting to cause criminal damage at Southampton and has since been released on bail pending further police inquiries.

A 17-year-old arrested on suspicion of wilfully obstructing the highway at a protest in Portsmouth on Wednesday has also been released on bail

BBC News

Back to Liverpool Magistrates’ Court, where Paul Daintith has pleaded guilty to possession of a knife in a Section 60 area.

The order gives police enhanced stop and search powers to stop individuals and is designed to minimise serious violence.

The court heard how Daintith was arrested after revealing he had a craft knife tucked into the waistband of his trousers.

When asked why he had the knife during a police interview following his arrest, Daintith said he “was a smackhead who picks everything up”.

His case will go to Liverpool Crown Court on 15 August for sentence because the defendant has a previous conviction for a similar offence.

After being denied bail and taken into custody, Daintith, who was wearing a football shirt, shouted: “Wanker”.

Elsewhere, Bristol Magistrates’ Court has heard how 42-year-old Lee James “couldn’t get” a knuckleduster off his hand during riots in Southampton because “he has quite thick knuckles”.

Representing James, Janet Brownlow said her client had attended the protest “out of curiosity” and wanted to stress that he is “not a racist”.

She said James had picked up the knuckle-duster at a property he had previously worked on and left it in his van, from where he had picked it up and put it on before the protest.

District Judge Lynne Matthews remanded James into custody ahead of his sentencing hearing at Southampton Crown Court on 12 August.

Sky News

Ryan Wheatley is facing a custodial sentence after pleading guilty to assault by beating of a police officer who he “barrelled” into at a protest in Southampton. The 40-year-old, of Malvern Close, Fair Oak, admitted running into Sergeant Rob Perry at the demonstration on Wednesday.

Leah Dillon, prosecuting, told Southampton Magistrates’ Court, that the defendant had attended the protest wearing a mask and a hooded top with an England flag draped over his shoulders. She said that he was part of a small group of anti-immigrant protesters who were confronted by a group of about 400 counter protesters.

Ms Dillon described how Wheatley was spotted by Sgt Perry leaving the group and attempting to run at the counter-demonstration. She said that he stepped in to intervene when the defendant ran straight into him.

She said that the officer sprayed Wheatley with an incapacitant spray and he was arrested. Ms Dillon said that he accepted in interview that he had “barrelled into the officer”.

Barry Keel, defending, said that Wheatley, who is unemployed, had expressed remorse for his actions and added: “He accepts he has let himself down, his family down, he is a family man with children and grandchildren.”

District Judge Tim Pattinson committed the case for sentencing at Southampton Crown Court on Monday, August 12, and remanded Wheatley in custody until then.

Manchester Evening News

Stephen Dure, also known as Stevie Trap, featured in a regional edition of a BBC Inside Out programme in 2017

Stephen Dure, also known as Stevie Trap, featured in a regional edition of a BBC Inside Out programme in 2017

A self-styled “paedophile hunter” has been jailed after admitting falsely accusing a man of grooming teenagers.

Stephen Dure, 34, also known as Stevie Trap, pleaded guilty to making an improper communication online at a hearing on Friday.

His wrongly-accused victim said he had been sacked and his home had been attacked as a result.

On Monday, Dure was sentenced to 15 weeks in prison. He was also ordered to pay costs of about £750.

Dure, from Southampton, said his online career might be over but his team would continue his work.

Dure appeared in a BBC Inside Out programme in 2017, when he explained how he posed as children on the internet to “trap” sex offenders.

His Facebook page, which shows videos of him confronting suspected paedophiles, has more than 200,000 followers.

Southampton Magistrates’ Court heard he had accused Paul Farhad, 42, of being a “violent psychopath” and a “massive danger to society” in a Facebook post in November 2017.

Mr Farhad, from Eastleigh, said 111,000 people had viewed the message, which he said also implied he was a paedophile.

As a result he lost his job, paint was sprayed on his door and a brick was thrown through his window, he told the court.

Alfred Underwood, defending, said Mr Dure accepted Mr Farhad was not a paedophile, which was “nowhere suggested” in the Facebook message read out in court.

The victim then produced a screenshot of the post on his mobile phone.

It showed the words “grooming teenagers” had been deleted from the original published message at some stage.

Dure then changed his plea to guilty.

BBC News