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A Hartlepool man has been sentenced to 16 months’ detention after pleading guilty to violent disorder.

Kieron Gatenby, 19, of Yeovil Walk, Hartlepool, was part of a group throwing bottles and bricks at police and smashing windows of houses, cars and shops while chanting racial slurs.

The teen, who has no previous convictions, was not motivated by far-right ideology and “got carried along” by the crowd, his lawyer Calum McNicholas told Teesside Crown Court earlier today.

He was arrested the day after the disorder as he rode his bike in town after police recognised him from bodycam footage where he was seen throwing an egg.

Gatenby, who will serve his sentence in a young offenders’ institution, denied having any racist beliefs but admitted his behaviour was unacceptable.

BBC News

Judge Laird sentenced the teenager to 20 months detention in a Young Offender Institution. The Judge added he will serve up to half of his sentence in custody before being released on licence.

The defendant’s time on remand will count towards his sentence. The Judge did not make a criminal behaviour order in the case.

The teen is taken down to the cells.

Gazette Live

A Wakefield teenager has admitted being part of a group who violently rocked a police van during rioting in Rotherham, leaving a police community support officer (PCSO) fearing for his life.

18-year-old Kenzie Roughley, of Barnsley Road, Pontefract, West Yorkshire, was filmed punching and kicking a South Yorkshire Police CCTV van as hundreds of people battled with officers outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Wath-upon-Dearne, Rotherham, a district judge was told.

Footage of the van being rocked from side, with its rooftop mast swinging alarmingly, was one of many dramatic images of violence on Sunday, August 4, 2024.

Prosecutor Simon Walton told Sheffield Magistrates’ Court on Thursday that the PCSO inside the vehicle “described fearing for his life”.

The officer got into the driver’s seat and managed to drive it away, Mr Walton said.

Wearing a light blue hoodie, blond-haired Roughley yawned in the glass-fronted dock as he confirmed his details and pleaded guilty to one count of violent disorder.

He was remanded in custody to appear at Sheffield Crown Court on Friday.

Sheffield Star

(Top left: Adam Wharton. Top right: Ellis Wharton. Bottom left: John O’Malley. Bottom right: William Morgan)

Four men have been jailed for a combined eight years and three months following violent disorder in Liverpool and Southport.

• John O’Malley, 43, of Cambridge Gardens, in Southport, was jailed for two years and eight months after pleading guilty to violent disorder in Southport.

• Adam Wharton, 28, of Selwyn Street, in Kirkdale, was jailed for one year and eight months after pleading guilty to burglary with intent to steal at Spellow Library in Walton.

• Ellis Wharton, 22, of Selwyn Street, in Kirkdale, was jailed for 11 months years after pleading guilty to burglary with intent to steal at Spellow Library in Walton and assaulting an emergency services worker.

• William Nelson Morgan, 69, of Linton Street, Walton, was jailed for two years and eight months after pleading guilty to violent disorder and possession of an offensive weapon in Walton.

Adam and Ellis Wharton, who are brothers, were arrested in the early hours of the morning on Sunday 4 August following violent scenes on County Road, in Walton, the previous evening.

Ellis was arrested inside the damaged Spellow Hub Library after officers saw him trying to escape with a computer monitor. He also assaulted an officer at the scene. Adam was arrested shortly afterwards when he was spotted by officers acting suspiciously and later identified as being part of a group who entered the library.

Morgan was also involved in the disorder on the same evening, on County Road, when he armed himself with a wooden bat during the violent scenes against officers.

O’Malley was identified as being part of the disorder on St Luke’s Road, in Southport, on Tuesday 30 July, when missiles were thrown at police carriers and officers, causing serious injuries.

Assistant Chief Constable Paul White said: “The latest results from court today means there are now seven men in prison following the violent disorder in Southport and Liverpool.

“This should serve as a stark warning to anyone who chooses to take part in such abhorrent behaviour. You will be swiftly arrested and could end up in a jail cell for a considerable amount of time.

“The investigation to identify anyone who took part in the disorder continues and we have now made 44 arrests in total. This will only rise as a specialist team reviews hundreds of hours of footage taken of the incidents.

“We continue to appeal for anyone with information about the disorder in Southport and Liverpool to come forward.”

If you have any information, you can contact us @MerpolCC or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111, with reference 24000663787.

Merseyside Police

You can read the sentencing remarks here

Joseph Ley, 30, of Hollywood Towers, Stockport, has pleaded guilty to violent disorder; and possession of a baton. Mr Lynch said Ley was involved with a large group of white males who surrounded black male on Piccadilly Gardens on August 3.

Ley was heard to say: “You got a problem with us English, bro?”. He then grabbed the man with both hands around his neck and pushing him to the floor. He then punched the man in the face.

“The complainant tried to stand up, this defendant forcefully kicked him to the left side of the face,” Mr Lynch said. Ley kicked the man again, knocking him to the floor. A crowd began to gather around to ‘cheer and clap’ and another man appeared to throw a metal fence towards the man, which thankfully missed him. Ley then kicked the man again before another man punched him.

Others joined in the attack, with comments heard such as: “Kill him… Stamp on his f***ing face.” The man was chased by some members of the group whilst the crowd could be heard chanting: “Save our kids, save our kids.”

Police officers then surrounded the victim completely in order to protect him from further attacks, the prosecutor said. Ley was later arrested, with officers finding a baton at his house in Stockport.

He was said to have previous convictions for violence, the court heard. Applying for bail, defence lawyer Simon Morton said his client handed himself into the police when he was aware they had been to his address. “He was cooperative and fully transparent,” he said.

Remanding him into custody, District Judge Joanne Hirst said: “This was shameful and frightening civil disorder in which a man was attacked by you due to his race.” Ley will next appear at Manchester Crown Court on August 15.

Manchester Evening News

A “thug” who was seen kicking another man during protests in Plymouth has been jailed for 32 months.

Michael Williams, 51, of Sparkwell, Devon, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a charge of violent disorder relating to Monday’s incident.

Judge Robert Linford, sentencing Williams and a second defendant at Plymouth Crown Court on Thursday, said that “thugs like you… ran amok”.

He said Williams was “seen to be fighting and kicking another male” and when he was arrested he was found with a stone in his jogging bottoms.

The judge dismissed as “ludicrous” Williams’s claim that it was a “healing stone”.

In video footage played to the court, Williams chanted “Allah, Allah, who the f*** is Allah” after his arrest, and repeatedly swore at police.

Edward Bailey, for Williams, said that the defendant “didn’t set out on this particular evening with the intention of violence” and “had been drinking earlier that day”.

Manchester Evening News

A man who spat at police and threatened to punch an officer during protests in Plymouth has been jailed for 26 months.

Daniel McGuire, 45, of Crescent Avenue, Plymouth, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a charge of violent disorder relating to the incident on Monday.

Judge Robert Linford, sentencing McGuire at Plymouth Crown Court on Thursday, said the defendant had been drunk and returned after police asked him to leave.

He said McGuire was “seen to repeatedly spit at the police” and video footage showed him “swearing and threatening to punch the police”.

Feleena Grosvenor, for McGuire, said that the defendant was “sorry for spitting and he was so ashamed during his interview he could barely watch the video”.

She said he had sustained a broken arm.

Manchester Evening News

Oliver Chapman, 23, of Duke Street, Radcliffe, pleaded guilty to violent disorder.

The court heard that Chapman was involved with a large-scale disturbance in Piccadilly Gardens on August 4.

Chapman did a ‘spin karate kick’ at shop window after being dropped off to shop by his mum – before throwing a tantrum in the cells

The court heard Chapman was involved with a large-scale disturbance in Piccadilly Gardens on August 4.

A few hundred people had gone down Mosley Street, before a large group began ‘kicking shop windows’.

“A large number of people were kicking at a mobile and vape shop, about a dozen,” prosecutor Robin Lynch said. “One person, not this defendant, picked up a street sign and threw it at a window. This defendant was then seen to do a spin karate kick against the window.

“The police managed to get into the area and this defendant was rugby tackled immediately.”

Chapman was wearing a balaclava at the time, as were a number of others, the court heard. Due to the amount of people he was given a dispersal notice and left the area. Further investigation led to him being arrested at his home in Radcliffe, where he lives with his parents. Officers found the balaclava in his home.

He accepted the offences in his police interview, and stated he was ‘sorry for what happened’.

He said he had been dropped off by his mum to go shopping for clothes, and said he got ‘mixed up in conversation’ with a group of demonstrators.

“He said he felt excited and there was an adrenaline build up, and a male handed him a balaclava which he put on and a bottle of wine. He said he spun and kicked though said he didn’t intend to cause any damage.”

He refused to say whether he was involved in any social media activity in relation to the demonstration and refused to provide a PIN code for his phone.

When he was taken into custody he became abusive towards police officers and threw coffee over his cell this morning, the court heard. A previous charge of criminal damage has since been dropped.

Mitigating, Bill Dowdall said Chapman had one previous conviction for a dissimilar matter, and said he had been cooperative at the time.

“He is not stupid, he is autistic,” he said. He said his client had a right to bail and said he had a settled address.

Remanding him into custody, District Judge Joanne Hirst said Chapman had become involved in ‘dangerous and unlawful’ disorder. She added that he could be expecting a jail term of three years.

“It is suggested there was a preplanned attendance to that civil disorder by you and you involved yourself in significant violent activity and damage to a local business,” she said.

Chapman will next appear at Manchester Crown Square on August 15.

Manchester Evening News

Marcus Foster, 24, of Oswald Road, Chorlton, pleaded guilty to violent disorder. The offence took place in Nelson Square, Bolton on August 4.

The full court charge reads: “On 14:00 and 18:00hrs on 4th August 2024 at Nelson Square, Bolton used or threatened unlawful violence when present together with others being three or more persons in total who used or threatened unlawful violence and the conduct taken together was such as would cause a person of reasonable firmness present at the scene to fear for his or her personal safety.”

Not other details have been revealed.

He was remanded into custody and will next appear at Bolton Crown Court on August 16.

Manchester Evening News

An 18-year-old man has admitted being part of a group who violently rocked a police van during rioting in Rotherham, leaving a police community support officer (PCSO) fearing for his life.

Kenzie Roughley, of Barnsley Road, Pontefract, West Yorkshire, was filmed punching and kicking a South Yorkshire Police CCTV van as hundreds of people battled with officers outside a hotel housing asylum seekers, a district judge was told.

Footage of the van being rocked from side, with its rooftop mast swinging alarmingly, was one of many dramatic images of Sunday’s violence.

Prosecutor Simon Walton told Sheffield Magistrates Court on Thursday that the PCSO inside the vehicle “described fearing for his life”.

The officer got into the driver’s seat and managed to drive it away, Mr Walton said.

Wearing a light blue hoodie, blond-haired Roughley yawned in the glass-fronted dock as he confirmed his details and pleaded guilty to one count of violent disorder.

He was remanded in custody to appear at Sheffield Crown Court on Friday.

Manchester Evening News