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A man who fractured his ankle after leaving a shop with “as many vapes as he could carry” has been locked up.

Anthony Hobkirk, 34, filmed the widespread disorder that broke out in Sunderland on August 2 and recorded himself saying “I love **** like this” and “get rid of the black ***** from this country, too many of them”.

Newcastle Crown Court heard when darkness descended on the city and the trouble continued, fires were started and shops were looted by rioters.

Prosecutor Michael Bunch said Hobkirk was caught on CCTV “sauntering away” from a vape shop that had been raided but he went over on his ankle and fractured it when he struggled with a police officer who caught him in the act.

The court heard Hobkirk, who had downed “about eight pints” that day and said he was on the city for a dog walk, first came to the attention of the police when the vape store was looted.

Mr Bunch said: “He had as many vapes as he could carry in his arms.

“Police arrested the defendant and he was initially compliant but then began to resist and tried to walk away and was taken to the ground.

“During the course of that he turned his ankle and sustained a fracture as a consequence of that.”

The court heard it was when Hobkirk’s phone was examined police found the recordings which showed his presence in the city throughout that day, as well as the vile words he was saying.

Hobkirk, of no fixed address, admitted violent disorder and burglary and has been jailed for a total of 31 months.

Judge Tim Gittins told him: “You, together with many others, brought shame upon the city of Sunderland”

The judge said the language Hobkirk used in his recordings encouraged the violence, although he did not use any himself, and he used “derogatory, abusive, racist and ignorant terms”.

The judge told him: “You received summary justice to an extent by the ankle injury that you sustained, albeit that was entirely your own fault in resisting arrest.”

Judge Gittins added: “You were carrying as many vapes as you could carry and if ever there was a symbol that your behaviour that day, and of others, was not related to any genuine cause or concern, that typifies it.”

Sam Faulks, defending, said Hobkirk’s offending was linked to excessive alcohol use and added: “It’s no mitigation really but he did fracture his ankle so he is already understanding the errors of his ways in a very particular and immediate way.”

Mr Faulks said Hobkirk “staggered” rather than “sauntered” out of the shop with the vapes.

Mr Bunch told the court police officers, dogs and horses were pelted with missiles as disorder spread throughout the city that Friday afternoon and the area was unsafe for ordinary members of the public.

Mr Bunch said: “Officers were met with serious and sustained levels of violence. Officers were attacked with missiles and verbally abused.

“Four officers required hospital treatment and some are not fit enough to return to frontline duties.

“Police vehicles were targeted and damaged. Several patrol cars needed repairs.

“At times lone police on vehicle patrol found themselves targeted by offenders in the middle of the protest.

“Families of a number of officers were at home in fear for their loved ones out on duty, having witnessed the horror of what was unfolding on news and social media.”

The court heard the city’s police hub was set on fire, business premises were smashed and shops were looted.

Northumbria Police Chief Constable Vanessa Jardine said in an impact statement it remains unclear how much damage was caused by the rioters but the cost of repairs could run to hundreds of thousands of pounds.

Police vehicles as well as community buildings and businesses came under attack.

Ms Jardine said the violence was met with a £1 million policing operation and the psychological cost to officers involved is yet to be known.

She added: “The North East is a wonderful, vibrant and safe place to live and work.

“The vast majority of our people are law abiding, proud members of the community.”

Sunderland Echo

Six more men have been jailed for their part in disorder which took place in Stoke-on-Trent and Tamworth over the summer, including one offender who wore a pig mask as he targeted a hotel and police officers with missiles.

On Friday, Tyler Marchese, 21, was jailed for two years and one month for violent disorder and assaulting a police officer in the Hanley area of the city on 3 August.

Daniel Bagguley, 31, from Newcastle-under-Lyme, was also sentenced for violent disorder in Hanley as was Joseph Pointon, 23, from Biddulph – they received 26 months and 28 months respectively.

Three others were sentenced on Thursday.

They included Jordan Jones, 27, of Meir; and Jordan Winyard, 28, of no fixed address.

Jones was sentenced at the same court to two years and two months after he previously admitted violent disorder in Stoke-on-Trent and possession of cannabis.

He was caught on CCTV launching a brick at officers and shouting abuse, according to Staffordshire Police.

Winyard was given a three-year sentence at Stafford Crown Court after he pleaded guilty to violent disorder in Tamworth on 4 August.

He wore a pig mask as he launched missiles at police officers, police dogs and the Holiday Inn Express hotel, according to Staffordshire Police.

The force recently said it had arrested a total of 114 people and charged 46 following the disorder in Stoke-on-Trent on 3 August and in Tamworth on 4 August.

Riots and anti-immigration protests took place across the UK after three young girls were killed in Southport, Merseyside, on 29 July.

The unrest was fuelled by false claims on social media that the suspect was an asylum seeker.

BBC News

‘What on earth were you thinking?’



On a warm summer evening in July, a Facebook post began circulating north Manchester. It called for action on Oldham Road.

“Let’s get them out,” it declared. “6pm today. Stand up and take note, because if you don’t, no-one will.”

Soon, a mob of up to 70 people had answered the call, gathering outside a Holiday Inn in Newton Heath. Before long, bottles, bricks and eggs filled the sky.

Police were scrambled to defend the hotel and its residents – the majority of whom were asylum seekers. ‘Protestors’ flung abuse and obscenities as officers hurried them inside during shameful scenes of violence.

In the sky above, a helicopter hovered – tracking the crowd’s every move.

Among them on July 31 were Vanessa Smith and her daughter Nevey. The pair were captured on video throwing liquids at police officers and asylum seekers.

Just metres from where a man was being taken to the floor and detained by three policemen, a bird’s eye view showed Nevey, 21, was pushing a pram.

Sat inside was her 20-month-old son. Her mother was seen recording the incident.

Just days after her daughter was hauled before the same judge, Vanessa Smith, 42, was sentenced for her actions today (September 26).

The Smiths were part of a violent crowd which gathered in front of what was supposed to be a place of safety for defenceless people seeking refuge.

One of Manchester’s most senior judges had strong words for Nevey Smith as she faced the consequences of her actions. “What on earth were you thinking?” he questioned the 21-year-old single mother in Manchester Crown Court earlier this week.

He characterised her decision to get involved while her son was present in a pram as an ‘extraordinary and concerning feature’ of the case. “I doubt very much you had his safety and wellbeing in mind,” he added.

During Nevey Smith’s sentencing hearing, it was revealed that when questioned, she admitted she didn’t understand what an asylum seeker was. “That aspect of the case and indeed other aspects of the case show you have quite a lot to learn and quite a lot of growing up to do,” Judge Patrick Field KC told Smith.

Today, the same judge took to court to sentence her mother. During the shocking disorder, a bus was attacked and an asylum seeker being escorted into the hotel was injured by flying glass. The prosecution told how Vanessa Smith was seen as part of the group and threw liquid towards police officers.

Vanessa Smith, a mum-of-three with two other children aged 16 and 11, handed herself in to police and pleaded guilty to violent disorder.

Judge Field told the elder Smith that she had been ‘wholly misguided’ in her involvement in the mob and the court heard how she has suffered the loss of her employment at a Failsworth café because of it. Vanessa Smith, of Farnborough Road in Failsworth, was sentenced to an 18 month community order, 100 hours of unpaid work, 15 rehabilitation activity days, and instructed to make a payment of £150 to the cost of proceedings.

The judge accepted the defence’s submission that it was an ‘isolated incident and out of character’, with the throwing of water being the height of her contribution to the day’s chaos. But the judge called the behaviour ‘mistaken, ill-advised’, and’ completely unacceptable’.

“You should be duly ashamed, particularly as there were children present – your grandson was present. I’m confident that what we’ve just seen and heard about is not the example you would want to hold up for your children and grandchildren,” added the judge.

Vanessa Smith sighed as she was spared jail, as Judge Field said: “You’ve received a merciful sentence, don’t let me down.”

Manchester Evening News

Leah Lee, of Hall Lane Estate, Willington, has pleaded guilty to racially aggravated damage to property after she smashed a window during a violent disturbance in the town on August 5.

A charge of violent disorder was allowed to lay on file.

The court heard how the teenager called a man a ‘P*** b******’ after smashing a window.

The 19-year-old was remanded in custody until she is sentenced on Friday, November 8.

Tabitha Buck, representing the teenager, asked for a pre-sentence report to be conducted as her client was a vulnerable young woman.

Judge Laird warned the teenager that she is facing a custodial sentence for her behaviour.

Northern Echo

Four people, have admitted taking part in violent disorder in Staffordshire in August.

Three men and a boy all pleaded guilty to charges relating to unrest in Hanley and Tamworth – where a Holiday Inn housing asylum seekers was targeted by rioters.

Hayden Cooper-Horne, 18, of Tamworth, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and possessing a controlled drug of class B.

Lewis Edwards, 21, of Bentilee, Stoke-on-Trent, Jordan Winyard, 28, of no fixed address, and a 16-year-old boy, of Stoke-on-Trent, all pleaded guilty to violent disorder.

During the riot in Tamworth, Cooper-Horne threw rocks at officers, while Winyard was seen wearing a pig mask when he threw missiles at officers, police dogs and the hotel, Staffordshire Police said.

It was one of a wave of protests and riots that swept the UK at the beginning of August in the wake of the Southport stabbings.

In part they were fuelled by false claims the suspect was a migrant who had come to the country in a small boat.

In Hanley, the 16-year-old boy was seen wearing a balaclava as he launched missiles at police.

Edwards was also seen throwing a rock at officers.

Staffordshire Police said 105 people had now been arrested and 42 charged with offences relating to the violent disorder.

Winyard is due to be sentenced at Stafford Crown Court on Thursday, while Cooper-Horne is due to appear at the same court on 8 November.

The 16-year-old boy – who cannot be named for legal reasons – is due to be sentenced at the North Staffordshire Justice Centre on 16 October and Edwards is due to be sentenced at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on 1 November.

BBC News

A 15-year-old boy has told a court he is “so ashamed” of his part in this summer’s rioting.

The teenager, who cannot be named, was caught on CCTV throwing missiles at police officers and stealing items from Greggs and Lush in Hull city centre on 3 August.

His parents took him to a police station after they spotted him in videos showing the disorder, Grimsby Magistrates’ Court, sitting as a youth court, was told on Thursday.

He pleaded guilty at a previous hearing to violent disorder and two counts of burglary but avoided prison after the judge told him he felt his remorse was “genuine”.

Several towns and cities across England saw disorder following the fatal stabbing of three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on 29 July in Southport, Merseyside.

In Hull, officers were attacked, shops looted and fires started as a demonstration turned violent.

The boy told the court: “I know what I did was wrong and I can’t take back my actions. I am trying my hardest to turn my life around. I’m so ashamed of myself and I am so, so sorry.”

As well as being captured on CCTV, the boy appeared on TikTok videos throwing rocks, water bottles and pieces of metal at police.

He was also seen helping others throw a ladder at officers and encouraged another person to smash the window of a Greggs store before stealing food and moving on to Lush where he helped himself to bath products.
‘Supportive family’

Joe Painter, mitigating, said: “He was involved to a significant degree and he appreciates that. It’s felt that [the boy] was heavily influenced by his peers.”

Sentencing, District Judge Daniel Curtis explained why he had decided not to jail the teenager.

He said: “It is not lost on me that your family, when they saw that you were involved, took you to the police station. That for me is the hallmark of a loving and supportive family.”

The boy, who was supported in the dock by his mother, said: “It has hurt them in many ways. I am willing to do anything to make it right.”

The judge said he felt the boy’s statement to the court was both “genuine” and “reflects remorse”.

“If I sent you to custody, that would have a dramatic impact on your education,” said the judge.

“It would have a dramatic impact on your future as a child because it would most likely be that you were in an institution with people that led you astray on the 3rd of August.”

In addition to the referral order, the boy was ordered to pay £200 in compensation.

BBC News

A rioter who ripped a wing mirror off a police van in a “moment of complete and utter madness” has been jailed.

Dean Fowler, 32, was filmed attacking the van during widespread violence outside the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham on 4 August.

He pleaded guilty to violent disorder at a previous hearing and said he “wished he had never gone” to the riot, his barrister told the court.

Fowler, from Barnsley, was jailed for two and a half years at Sheffield Crown Court.

Video played during his sentencing showed how the van was one of two police vehicles targeted by rioters, who violently rocked one of them as they surrounded them both.

Laura Marshall, defending, said her client had left his home to “clear his head” after an argument with his partner, and saw what was happening at the hotel on social media.

She said he made the “foolish decision to go down there”.

Fowler was “extremely remorseful” and wished to apologise to officers, she added.

“He said it was moment of complete and utter madness and he wished he had never gone,” Ms Marshall said.

The court heard how 64 police officers, four dogs and a horse were injured in the violence outside the hotel, which was being used to house asylum seekers.

Neil Coxon, prosecuting, told the court one senior police officer said in a statement that he had “never seen a crowd so out of control” and it was “sheer mob mentality”.

BBC News

‘I could feel how hateful those words were, especially as I was there on my own without anyone I knew’

A woman was subjected to vile racist abuse before being spat on during the ‘protests’ in Manchester last month.

Thomas Richard, 56, was one of a large group who gathered in Piccadilly Gardens on August 3. Footage played to Manchester Crown Court, showed how the group encircled three young women who were wearing hijabs and headscarves before hurling Islamophobic abuse at them.

During the disorder a number of males, including Richard, can be seen spitting towards them. One of the women, who had been out shopping in the city centre, was spat on by another man, with the spit landing on her face.

The ‘protest’ arose after false information about the identity and background of the man accused of killing three children in Southport was spread online.

Earlier pleading guilty to violent disorder, today (September 24) Richard, of Miles Platting, was jailed.

In a victim impact statement read out to the court, the woman said: “I am very much appalled and disgraced at the behaviour of the far-right EDL members towards myself. The assault was completely unprovoked as I was just watching from a sensible distance and do not feel under any circumstances I deserved what had happened to me.

“Being spat on is a despicable act that made me feel extremely violated, degraded and dehumanised. I felt scared and worried for my safety (and others) in that moment and I still do.

“As a result of this assault I am now terrified to leave my own home because of these people and what happened to me.”

The court heard that the 22-year-old who describes herself as a white British woman, wearing a hijab and a keffiyeh scarf, representing Palestine, was observing the large group and police in Piccadilly Gardens during the afternoon.

“Seeing that the group were becoming more violent, and the police were trying to disperse them in a different direction, she tried to go across Piccadilly Gardens,” prosecutor Kate Gaskell said.

“She heard shouts of “Stop the boats” AND “Go back home”, as well as comments about her God, Allah, and religion. She said ‘I could feel how hateful those words were, especially as I was there on my own without anyone I knew’.

“She was confronted by one member who said, ‘What are you doing here, can’t you see you are antagonising us’. She informed him she was simply watching. In retrospect she thought perhaps she should have left but she didn’t want to let them win, and it was a public place.”

The court heard that the situation escalated quickly, during which time two Muslim girls in headscarves came to join her. They were quickly surrounded by a large group of individuals chanting “Go back home.”

The woman told them to leave the two girls alone, at which point the insults were directed at her, and a large number began filming her. They commented that she had been brainwashed, and asked whether she had been married when she was 6 years old, it was said.

The crowd became more aggressive and started shouting ‘Get that terrorist flag off her’ pulling her Keffiyeh scarf before several Muslim males came to assist her.

“Before she had a chance to move, she felt spit land on her right cheek,” Ms Gaskell added.

In footage obtained by the police, Richard could be seen chanting and pointing his fingers in a gun gesture at the three girls, shouting: ‘F*** off home.”

“He was aggressively shouting and spat in the direction of the three girls, though he was not responsible for the spit that landed on the victim,” the prosecutor said.

“The defendant continued shouting ‘F*** off home’ and then ‘F*** off to Palestine’. One of the photojournalists present further heard him say something to the effect of ‘Take the burkas’ and ‘We want our country back’.

Damien Zelazowski, mitigating, conceded that the three young women were ‘targeted’ by the group for some time, and were ‘pursued’ when they were under police protection.

On the day in question, he said: “He was passing through on his way to St Anne’s Square to go to the footbank. He saw the protests and became involved in the incident thinking it would be more peaceful than it was.

“But he didn’t move away and he became more involved. He does offer his apologies, he is ashamed of what took place. He became emboldened by the crown and, to use his wording, swept up.”

Sentencing Richard, who has 55 previous convictions for 141 offences, Judge Patrick Field KC said the ‘protest’ had the appearance of people ‘venting ill informed and ignorant prejudices’.

“They were racist, ill informed and Islamophobia chanting and vile abuse towards her. Her calm defiance in the fact of what was being said to her was frankly admirable and humbling,” he said.

“She stood up for herself and her beliefs in the face of the nasty, ill educated and intolerant comments. She said she felt dehumanised by what happened to her – she demonstrated more humanity than many others present.

“You were threatening and deliberately insulting her not because you took a personal dislike to her, but simply because of her Muslim faith.”

Richard, of Kingsland Close, Miles Platting, was jailed for 20 months. He was also banned from entering a certain area in Manchester city centre for three years under the terms of a criminal behaviour order.

Manchester Evening News

Ashley Williams was caught on CCTV as he roamed around the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham with a fire extinguisher in his hand.

A bricklayer who went into a hotel which was besieged by rioters before throwing a fire extinguisher and a chair at police has been jailed for two-and-a-half years.

Ashley Williams, 21, was caught on CCTV as he roamed around the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers, Rotherham, on August 4 with a fire extinguisher in his hand as more than 200 asylum seekers took shelter upstairs and staff barricaded themselves into the kitchen.

The footage was shown at Sheffield Crown Court on Wednesday along with further clips which showed him emerging from the building, wearing very distinctive “neon green” shorts and a t-shirt, and throwing the fire extinguisher at a line of police officers with riot shields who were pinned against a wall.

Williams, of Lowfield Walk, Denaby Main, South Yorkshire, then re-joined the large crowd which was screaming at the officers and throwing missiles before emerging again to throw a chair at the line of shields.

The court heard how 64 police officers, four horses and a dog were injured in the violence outside the hotel and the mob tried to set fire to the building as a number of people smashed their way in through a fire door.

James Burley, defending, said his client came from a “stable, loving home” and is “adamant there is no issue of racist intent”.

Mr Burley said Williams, who admitted violent disorder at an earlier hearing, has ADHD and has recently also been diagnosed with autism.

Judge Sarah Wright acknowledged that the defendant “struggled with consequential thinking” and had no previous convictions.

But she said he played a willing role in the violence.

Judge Wright said the disorder was “truly frightening” and added: “The police officers behaved with immense professionalism in the face of a determined and violent mob.”

More than 50 people have now been sentenced following the incident at the hotel.

Also on Wednesday, Nathan Annables, 25, of Manor Avenue, Goldthorpe, pleaded guilty to violent disorder in relation to the violence in Manvers.

He was remanded in custody to appear again at Sheffield Crown Court on October 16.

Evening Standard



A man has been jailed after admitting violent disorder during a riot.

John Walker, 25, took part in the Middlesbrough disorder on 4 August following the killing of three girls at a dance event in Southport, Merseyside.

Walker, of Fransham Road, Middlesbrough, was jailed for two years and six months after pleading guilty at Teesside Crown Court on Tuesday.

Supt Marc Anderson, who was Silver Commander during the disorder, said he had never “seen anything like” in 30 years of service.

By the end of August, Cleveland Police had arrested more than 110 people following disorder in Hartlepool and Middlesbrough.

BBC News