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A man and his girlfriend have been jailed for their involvement in violent disorder that broke out in Stoke-on-Trent amid a wave of unrest in the UK.

Ciaran Lockett and Deana Evans from Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, appeared at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on Friday over the disturbances in Hanley on 3 August.

At the hearing, Lockett, 34, was given a 32-month prison sentence for violent disorder.

Evans, 32, was jailed for 20 months for violent disorder and common assault of an emergency worker.

Riot police were deployed in Hanley when violence broke out, with three officers injured.

The incident came as riots and anti-immigration protests took place across the UK at the beginning of August.

The unrest followed the fatal stabbings of three girls in Southport in July, and was fuelled by false rumours online the suspect in the killings was Muslim and an asylum seeker.

BBC News

A 27-year-old man has been sentenced to 12 months in prison after pleading guilty to violent disorder during a protest in Dorset.

Bournemouth Crown Court heard that Eden Reboul, from Weymouth, threw a can of drink at a row of police officers.

About 400 anti-immigration protesters gathered on the Esplanade on 4 August, along with about 200 Stand Up to Racism demonstrators.

Reboul told police he had not taken his medication for ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) which made him irrational.

The court heard that the defendant had also accepted a conditional caution from police for an unconnected incident of unlawful violence later on the same day.

His defence barrister said Reboul denied being a racist, did not have views on immigration and had “got caught up” in the protest that was happening near his home.

In a letter to the judge, Reboul said: “I am so very sorry for my stupid actions, I have never been so ashamed in my life.”

“It’s been the biggest wake-up call in my life,” he added.

Judge Robert Pawson said there needed to be a deterrent sentence and that public violence “has no place in a society like ours”.

“It’s easy to mischaracterise your behaviour as just throwing an empty can but when you involved yourself with others in mass disorder, it’s the conduct of the group taken together which is of central importance, whatever an individual’s acts may be,” Judge Pawson added.

“Violence in public rarely, if ever, changes minds, it does little more than feed resentment and resistance.”

BBC News

A refugee has been jailed for attacking a car and setting tyres on fire during recent disorder.

Abderrahim Elmuoden, 20, of Wilmslow Close in North Tyneside, pleaded guilty to racially aggravated criminal damage, violent disorder, arson and two counts of burglary following the disorder in Hull city centre on 3 August.

Elmuoden, who fled Morocco for a new life in the UK, was sentenced to 45 months in prison at Hull Crown Court earlier.

Judge John Thackray KC said the defendant’s “particular part” in “12 hours of hate-fuelled mob violence” included attacking a car with a shopping trolley while three men inside “feared for their lives”.

Elmuoden was also seen on CCTV throwing tyres on a fire outside a garage and “left them to burn”, where nearby the judge said “the occupants, including children, were left to cower”.

Prosecutor Jeremy Evans also showed footage of Elmuoden, who appeared in court with the support of an interpreter, looting the O2 and Shoezone stores.

In mitigation for Elmuoden, barrister Rachel Scott said he had left Morocco after his mother died in 2021, as he had no other family there.

She said he was “sorry for his offending” and “in his own words, has ruined his life”.

She told the court he had been in Hull to visit his fiancée, and had been drinking before heading to meet a friend, at which point he got “caught up” in the disorder.

Mrs Scott told the court her client “did not hold racist views” and was now worried about his status as a refugee following the conviction.

Also jailed for his part in the disorder was Scott Rushworth, 33, of Lambwath Hall Court in Hull.

Appearing at Hull Crown Court earlier for sentencing having previously pleaded guilty to one count of violent disorder, the court heard Rushworth had been part of of a group who attacked a police officer and took their shield.

Rushworth could be seen posing with the shield on CCTV footage shown in court.

In mitigation for Rushworth, his defence barrister said their client was an “excellent father” who “did not hold racist views”, but was “disgusted by himself” for the part he played in the disorder.

Sentencing Rushworth to 28 months in prison, Judge Thackray said the footage he had seen was “horrifying and depressing”, and said 11 officers had been injured in the disorder – including one who had been “permanently scarred”.

The judge said Rushworth, who had a history of offending including a football banning order, was “at one point at the front of the disorder”, and was “in the thick of it” when the officer was “tackled to the ground”.

Rushworth also received a five-year Criminal Behaviour Order (CBO), banning him from gathering with others in a way people might find intimidating.

Orders removed and adjusted

Also at Hull Crown Court earlier, several defendants who were previously handed CBOs had them removed.

The review came after it was highlighted to the judge that many of the defendants did not meet the criteria as their previous offending did not warrant it.

Judge Thackray removed five-year CBOs previously handed out to the following defendants:

John Honey, 25

Stuart Randall, 55

Connor Whitely, 26

Jermaine Glover, 23

Jordan Murray, 26

Two defendants, David Buckle, 39, and Steven Love, 41, had their orders upheld but the date of the orders was brought back to the day they were sentenced rather than the date they leave prison.

One defendant, Christopher Douglas, 35, needed his order changed by Judge Bury, so a hearing was arranged for 9 September.

One final defendant, David Wilkinson, 46, did not appear for the hearing so will be called back at a later date for his hearing.

BBC News



A man who told police he had “no regrets” after taking part in a riot in Rotherham has been jailed for two years and eight months.

Brad Westerman was filmed throwing items through a window of the Holiday Inn Express in Manvers on 4 August.

The 24-year-old, of Washington Road in Goldthorpe, Barnsley, previously admitted a charge of violent disorder.

Sentencing him at Sheffield Crown Court on Friday, Judge Jeremy Richardson KC said Westerman had “wrecked his own life”.

Westerman was arrested when police went to detain his friend and co-rioter Jordan Teal, who was at the same house.

Judge Richardson said the violence carried out by people such as Westerman was so severe, some injured police officers had still not returned to work.

Video was played to the court which showed Westerman jumping around in his grey hoody and shorts.

He was present when a bin was thrown through a window at the hotel, with the prosecution saying he was “front and centre” during the violence.

During the window fitter’s arrest, he told officers he had “no regrets for what he had done”.

The judge said this “vile attitude… reveals your mindset”.

The case was held without Westerman’s friends and family in the court following previous disorder in the public gallery when people were shouting during the hearing.

‘Truly shocking’

During the violence, 64 police officers were injured with some not having returned to duty, Judge Richardson said.

Three police horses and a police dog were also injured and have since returned to work.

“The fact that that number of police officers were injured and the police animals were also injured is a measure of how serious this incident was,” the judge added.

Westerman was told during sentencing that people in the hotel were “fearful for their lives” during the “truly shocking and outrageous incident”.

“You richly deserve it,” the judge added, as he jailed Westerman.

BBC News

A self-employed businessman who punched a woman and threw a can at police during disorder in a city centre has been jailed for three years.

Ashley Harris, 36, of Chipperfield Drive, Kingswood, pleaded guilty to violent disorder after his “significant” role in the unrest in Bristol on 3 August.

The disorder occurred when hundreds of far-right protesters and a counter-protest group gathered for two demonstrations near Castle Park.

Footage played to Bristol Crown Court showed Harris clashing with police and counter protesters, throwing punches, hurling a can at police, and encouraging others to join in.

Harris is the 11th person to be jailed for their involvement in the unrest, with a total of 41 people arrested so far and 28 having been charged.

Widespread disorder broke out across England after the killing of three young girls in Southport, Merseyside, on 29 July, with false claims spread online about the person responsible.

The court was told how Harris was involved in early altercations in Castle Park before punching a female counter-protester outside the Mercure Hotel, which was believed to be housing asylum seekers.

Jailing Harris for three years, Judge James Patrick said: “Right at the start of the protest you were in Castle Park, squaring up to the police officers and were aggressive to others.

“As the police attempted to maintain order you were front and centre of what was going on as the crowd chanted, ‘We want our country back’.

“You threw a can at police officers and only backed off when police dogs forced the crowd back.”

Judge Patrick added Harris was “swearing at police officers and goading them” outside the hotel, before “throwing a punch at a woman”.

The court was also told how Harris was struck on the head by a flying object as he “charged” at a group of counter-protestors.

“The footage I have seen shows you strike out at a number of people, you were encouraging the group and at the front and centre of the movement towards the Mercure,” Judge Patrick said.

“You were significantly more involved than others. You participated in widespread acts of violence which was persistent and sustained.

“I note that you are sorry and ashamed. I hope that is true and simply not hollow words,” he added.

BBC News

Gavin Pinder, 47, has been jailed for two years and four months.

A “highly-paid” nuclear power industry worker who laughed as he took part in disorder outside a mosque in Southport has been jailed for two years and four months.

More than 50 police officers were injured and a carrier was set alight during riots outside Southport mosque on July 30, the day after three girls were killed in a knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in the town.

Liverpool Crown Court heard Gavin Pinder, 47, had a “highly paid, responsible job” at the Hinkley Point power station in Somerset, but had been at his home in Failsworth, Greater Manchester, spending time with family when he said he was contacted by an associate who made him aware of a protest that was to take place in Southport.

Michael Johnson, defending, said Pinder believed the protest was focused on the belief that “something was being held back from the public in relation to the identity or circumstances of the person who had been detained” following the knife attack.

He said Pinder, who admitted violent disorder, had travelled to Southport and congregated with others in a pub.

“He understood the focus of the protest was to be a police station where he believed the detainee to be held. He did not know that a mosque was going to be the focus of the protest and didn’t learn that until he arrived back in Manchester the day after,” Mr Johnson said.

Footage of the disorder showed Pinder shout at officers, throw a traffic cone and throw a smaller object towards them.

He was arrested at a pub in Manchester on August 17 and in interview told police he had been struck by an officer with a baton after asking why they were not releasing information about the suspect.

The court heard Pinder, father to a four-year-old, had 10 previous convictions, including for breaching an international football banning order.

Sentencing him, Judge Simon Medland KC said: “You threw two objects at police, were clearly seen to be laughing and taking the view, perhaps, this had a recreational element to you.

“How this sits with the character references in your case and your highly responsible, very well-paid job is difficult to reconcile.”

He was jailed along with Jonathan Duerden, 31, and Joseph Buckley, 44, who also admitted violent disorder.

Chris Taylor, prosecuting, said Duerden, a handyman from Colne, Lancashire, threw a brick that bounced off the top of a police carrier and encouraged the crowd to advance towards police.

He told police he travelled to Southport to lay flowers at a vigil, but said he had taken a cocktail of drugs including cannabis, ketamine and cocaine along with alcohol.

Andrew McInnes, defending, told the court the defendant had ADHD, was barely literate or numerate and his family believed he had been addicted to cannabis since the age of 13.

He said: “It certainly seems this defendant is more of a follower than a leader.”

Duerden was jailed for two years.

The court heard Buckley, of Litherland, Merseyside, was the joint owner of a civil engineering business and was seen on footage throwing a brick around a corner towards police.

In interview, he said he had thrown the brick because he was angry after an officer “assaulted him with a shield”.

Des Lennon, defending, said Buckley had believed he was going to a peaceful vigil but had stayed for about two hours after violence broke out because of “morbid curiosity”.

Jailing him for 16 months, Judge Medland said: “You are an intelligent and capable person and you could readily have left. You didn’t, you involved yourself in this.”

Evening Standard

A man who threw glass bottles and cans at police officers during a protest has been jailed for three years.

John Matthews, 30, of Knowle, was part of a group which used or threatened violence and caused others to fear for their safety during the unrest in Bristol city centre on 3 August.

The judge at Bristol Crown Court said Matthews was part of a “violent mob” which had been spurred on by false information following events in Southport.

He is the 10th person to be jailed for their involvement in the violent disorder, with a total of 41 people arrested so far and 28 having been charged.

‘Shameful scenes’

A number of demonstrations took place across England after high tensions over the killing of three young girls in Southport, Merseyside, on 29 July.

The protests turned volatile after false claims were spread online that the person responsible was an asylum seeker, who had arrived in the UK by boat.

Matthews was caught on CCTV footage throwing punches and trying to break the police line.

Det Ch Insp Clement Goodwin called Matthew’s behaviour on that day “completely disgraceful”.

“He showed an utter disregard for the safety of members of the public and police officers and I’m pleased that he has now received a lengthy prison sentence,” said Mr Goodwin. ”

Attended in ‘support of the NHS’

Rachel Stitt, defending Matthews, said the defendant suffered from ADHD, PTSD and bipolar disorder and had been the victim of stabbings several times.

She said he had described his decision to attend as “stupid” and that “he intended to peacefully protest in support of the NHS and the help they gave his grandmother”.

She told the court that things “escalated” once her client had been hit with CS gas, which “exacerbated his underlying mental health conditions” and led to his losing “his temper”.

‘Public entitled to a break from you’

Handing down his sentence Judge Patrick said “it is difficult to see how anybody could be in Bristol on a Saturday evening protesting in support of the National Health Service.”

He added: “This was persistent lawlessness and much of it in the name of patriotism.”

He said Matthews had a “bad record of offending”, telling him: “I have regard to prison overcrowding but very simply put the public are entitled to a break from you and your criminal behaviour and that’s what the public are going to get.”

Det Ch Insp Clement Goodwin added: “We are continuing to investigate the shameful scenes we saw on that day and we will continue to make more arrests and charge those responsible to ensure they face justice.”

On Thursday, another three men were charged with violent disorder for their role in the unrest.

Tom Thompson-Arnold, 30, of Clevedon, Thomas Medler, 24, of Lockleaze, and Mohamed Osman, 37, of Easton, were all due to appear at Bristol Magistrates’ Court, charged with violent disorder.

Police are still searching for a number of people involved in the incident, and have released new images, external of people they want to talk to.

BBC News

A judge has told a grandmother she should have “no misunderstanding” that her admission of taking part in disorder at a hotel used by asylum seekers could see her jailed.

Vanessa Smith, 42, pleaded guilty to violent disorder outside the hotel in Newton Heath, Manchester, on 31 July.

Smith had gone to the site with her daughter Nevey, who had been pushing her one-year-old son in a pushchair and admitted throwing liquid at police at the hotel at a previous hearing.

The pair will be sentenced in September, with Judge Patrick Field KC warning the grandmother at Manchester Crown Court that “all sentencing options” would be open, including “a custodial sentence”.

Scores of people were seen in a protest outside the hotel, which was part of a wave of disorder which swept across the country in the aftermath of a knife attack in Southport on 29 July, which left three children dead.

The court heard that Smith, like her daughter, had no previous convictions and had caring responsibilities for an 11-year-old daughter and 16-year-old son, both of whom had health issues.

Adjourning the hearing until 26 September and bailing Smith, Judge Field said whoever decided her fate would have “all sentencing options open to him or her”.

“That must include a custodial sentence, so there must be no misunderstanding<" he added.

Smith's daughter Nevey, who admitted violent disorder at the same court on 19 August, is due to be sentenced in 23 September.

BBC News

Jake Wray, Megan Davison and Amanda Walton appeared at Teesside Crown Court

A rioter who set up a “checkpoint” in Middlesbrough to ask drivers if they were English joined his girlfriend and her mum in court for their part in violent disorder on Teesside.

The trio pleaded guilty to violent disorder in the Middlesbrough riots on August 4.

Amanda Walton, 53, appeared at Teesside Crown Court on Thursday, via video link from Low Newton prison. She admitted throwing a missile at a building and causing damage to a car mirror. Her barrister asked the court for a pre-sentence report to be carried out before she is sentenced. Walton, of Ashling Way in Middlesbrough, will be back in court on September 23.

Minutes later, Walton’s daughter, Megan Davison, 24, pleaded guilty to violent disorder within the same riot. Davison was captured on CCTV on Parliament Road; she was seen jumping up and down on the roof of a car.

The court heard that the mum-of-two has had previous problems with substance misuse; her barrister Tabitha Buck, asked for a pre-sentence report. Davison, of Seaton Street in central Middlesbrough, will also be sentenced on September 23.

Megan Davison’s boyfriend, Jake Wray, also pleaded guilty to violent disorder in the Middlesbrough riots. The 23-year-old set up a “checkpoint” and asked drivers if they were “white” or “English.” Wray, who lives with Megan Davison on Seaton Street, was captured on video allowing white or “English” drivers to pass. He was under a suspended sentence when he committed his new offence. He will be sentenced on October 14.

Evan Wilkins-Doyle, 19 pleaded guilty to violent disorder within the Hartlepool riots. Wilkins-Doyle, of The Spinney in West Park, Hartlepool, appeared in court via video link from Durham prison, and was told he will be sentenced on September 20.

Lisa Davison, 31, also appeared in the dock. She pleaded guilty to violent disorder within the Hartlepool riots on July 31. Davison, of Lister Street in Hartlepool, was told that she will be sentenced on September 18, after the probation service has carried out a pre-sentence report. She was remanded into custody until then.

Dylan Willis, 18, admitted violent disorder after he was captured lobbing a brick through a glass door, from a Middlesbrough street filled with rioters. Willis was captured on camera wearing sunglasses and a gold chain. He later handed himself into police. Willis, of Masefield Road in Hartlepool, will be sentenced on September 2.

Gazette Live

Lewis Whitworth, 30, pleaded for leniency – a judge sent him to jail

A convicted drug dealer who took part in a ‘frightening’ attack outside a hotel which housed asylum seekers has been jailed.

On his way home from the pub, Lewis Whitworth, 30, a trainee mechanic, kicked a bus and joined a baying mob which hurled missiles and abuse at asylum seekers outside the premises close to his home in Newton Heath.

The trouble, said to have been organised by email, was part of the disorder which hit towns and cities across the country, including in Greater Manchester, following the fatal stabbings of three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance club in Southport last month. Incorrect rumours – that the suspect in the stabbings was an asylum seeker who arrived in the UK on a small boat – spread on social media and appears to have fuelled the trouble.

Violence erupted outside the hotel in Newton Heath two days after the stabbings.

Prosecutor Andrew Mackintosh told Manchester Crown Court on Wednesday that the disturbance took place following the incident in Southport on July 29 when three children were killed and two adults and eight other children were hurt.

He said ‘almost immediately after that incident people began organising protests online’ which were ‘principally’ aimed against asylum seekers who had been placed in hotels around the country.

One such protest was outside a hotel which housed asylum seekers in Newton Heath on July 31 to which organisers summoned protesters by email and mentioned the possibility of violence, according to Mr Mackintosh.

When police arrived at 4pm it was quiet despite a number of protesters in the area but it ‘didn’t remain quiet’, said Mr Mackintosh.

The defendant, unmasked unlike others and wearing a distinctive orange top, joined a number of protesters outside the hotel. One of them, not the defendant, tried to stop a bus which came under fire from missiles which smashed the front windscreen while the driver was assaulted, the court heard.

Footage shown in court captured Whitworth kicking the side of the bus while others repeatedly chanted ‘take the bus’.

The driver of the vehicle is heard to shout ‘behave yourselves’ before he is attacked, later asking terrified passengers ‘is everybody ok?’

In a statement read out in court, the bus driver said he had never experienced such ‘aggression’ in his 14 years in the job. He said he had to go to hospital and was left ‘very distressed’ and scared of talking to members of the public.

“I never imagine an incident like this could occur when I go to work. I don’t go to work expecting to be attacked. This has left me visibly shaken and frightened to go to work,” he said.

Another statement read to the court, from an asylum seeker who was staying at the hotel, said he was assaulted and he recalled members of the crowd ‘shouting abuse’ at him as he tried to make his way into the hotel where glass bottles were thrown at him and eggs were hurled at the premises.

Whitworth was also part of a group which was later captured on police footage hurling missiles, including broken bricks, towards riot cops, although the defendant was not seen to throw anything.

He was said to have laughed as the missiles were thrown at cops.

The court heard the footage was used to identify Whitworth who was later arrested and made no comment when he was interviewed.

Whitworth had five sets of previous convictions covering nine offences, the court was told, including a 32-month prison sentence for conspiracy to supply cocaine and heroin and a four-year jail sentence in 2019 for possession of cocaine and heroin with intent to supply.

Holly Nelson, defending, pointed to the defendant’s ‘early guilty plea’ but stressed his role was ‘limited’ and that he was not among those who had ‘orchestrated’ the trouble.

Whitworth’s role was ‘unsophisticated’ as he was clearly identifiable because of his distinctive clothing and was unmasked, according to Ms Nelson. She said the defendant had expressed ‘regret’ and had been training to become a mechanic before the disorder.

On the day, he had been drinking in Manchester city centre and when he was on his way home on a bus ‘curiosity’ got the better of him when he saw the protest and he joined it, according to Ms Nelson.

The lawyer asked for the judge to suspend any prison sentence, adding the defendant’s ‘supportive’ mother who was watching from the public gallery had ‘become more reliant’ on him.

Judge Patrick Field KC told Whitworth: “You joined a really, at times, violent crowd in the vicinity of (a hotel). The crowd assembled there because the hotel was being used to house asylum seekers many of whom are no doubt vulnerable people.

“Many people in that crowd were plainly anxious to demonstrate their antipathy at the presence of asylum seekers there. The disorder that followed involved throwing of missiles including eggs, glass bottles and bricks towards police officers and towards asylum seekers who attempted to return to the hotel. The disorder also involved what can only be described as a frightening attack upon a bus driver which was brought to a halt by a member of the crowd.

“Missiles were thrown at it and one of them smashed the front windscreen. The driver was assaulted and he and his passengers fled the bus fearing for their safety. Your involvement in all of this, however, was rather limited. You were seen to approach the bus to kick its side and you were also present at the front of the crowd pointing and jeering at the police whilst others around including what appears to be children were throwing pieces of broken brick at the police.”

The judge added: “Behaviour of this nature, that is violent disorder, committed by angry crowds in these circumstances calls for deterrent sentences, sentences that will deter other people acting as you did in the future. With that in mind, I’m satisfied that the appropriate punishment can only be achieved by an immediate sentence of imprisonment.”

Whitworth, of Costabeck Walk in Newton Heath, Manchester, was handed an 18-month prison sentence after he had earlier admitted a single offence of violent disorder. He glanced at his mother in the public gallery as he was taken down.

Manchester Evening News