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    Boy, 12, admits participating in two scenes of violent disorder in Manchester

    By Emily Dugan,

    9 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3ZBfSq_0uvKIH4f00
    Greater Manchester police assess the damage after the disturbances in Salford. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

    A 12-year-old boy has admitted to participating in two separate incidents of disorder in Manchester after he was caught throwing a missile at a police van and kicking the front window of a vape shop.

    The boy was one of two 12-year-olds who became the youngest to be convicted of criminal offences relating to the nationwide disorder earlier this month.

    They were among a string of offenders in courts across England who pleaded guilty to charges on Monday relating to the unrest. Prison sentences of up to three years were issued to those who had admitted to crimes at earlier hearings.

    The boy admitted to two charges of violent disorder at Manchester magistrates court, sitting as a youth court. District judge Joanne Hirst said the “very serious” case was the first she had dealt with in which someone had taken part in two separate incidents in the city.

    He attacked a bus outside a Holiday Inn housing asylum seekers on 31 July, kicking it and handing a rock to another youth. Then on 3 August he was filmed kicking the front window of a vape shop during disorder in Manchester city centre.

    Hirst said: “He’s more involved in the violence and disorder than any other defendant I’ve seen coming through these courts, adult or child.”

    Another 12-year-old, who was filmed throwing an object at police and riding off on his bike during the unrest in Southport on 30 July, pleaded guilty to violent disorder at Liverpool youth court.

    A 13-year-old girl is due to appear at Basingstoke magistrates court on Tuesday to face a charge of violent disorder over a protest in Aldershot, Hampshire Police said.

    The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is from Aldershot. It comes after reports of disorder outside Potters International Hotel on 31 July. A 40-year-old man, Steven Tiquin, will also appear at the court charged with assaulting police officers.

    In Northern Ireland, an 11-year-old boy has been charged with rioting and throwing petrol bombs and will appear at Belfast youth court on 6 September.

    The milestone of 1,000 arrests in relation to the recent disorder is expected to be reached imminently. So far, 975 people have been arrested and 546 charged, the National Police Chiefs’ Council said on Monday.

    While most of those appearing in court were men, two women admitted being “agitators” in disorder outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Manchester on 31 July. Tracy Pearson, 53, and Michelle Jibson, 45, both pleaded guilty to violent disorder at Manchester magistrates court on Monday.

    The prosecution said Jibson was seen to “strike out at a police officer” during the disorder, while Pearson was “advancing towards police lines”. After being remanded into custody, Pearson shouted over the judge: “Don’t care. Freedom of speech is gone. Joke.”

    Nevey Smith, 21, from Oldham, also admitted to throwing water at police during the same incident while her child was in a buggy.

    In Sheffield, Ricky Hardman, 41, a haulier from Barnsley, was sentenced to two years and eight months at the crown court on Monday after he was pictured in the media brandishing a plank of wood during riots outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Rotherham.

    Hardman was told that his being a father would not be a mitigation in sentencing. The recorder of Sheffield, judge Jeremy Richardson KC, said: “What a disgraceful example you are to your child,” and that only his guilty plea would reduce his time.

    Prosecutors have briefed that they are considering using the more serious charge of rioting, which carries a penalty of up to 10 years in prison.

    Hardman’s case and others sentenced on Monday related to violent disorder, which carries a maximum tariff of five years. In a nod to political briefings on the subject, Richardson said: “It is a matter for parliament to decide whether that is in need of revision in light of these recent events. I must, however, pass sentence on the law as it now is.”

    A 22-year-old who threw a vacuum cleaner through a Nigerian student’s window during riots in Middlesbrough and told a police officer “I hope your children get raped” was jailed for 26 months at Teesside crown court.

    Thomas Rogers pleaded guilty to violent disorder and possession of an offensive weapon after he was seen throwing bricks at police. His sentence was reduced as a result of his poor mental health and learning difficulty.

    At the same court, a teenager seen “celebrating with his arms in the air” after hitting a police officer with a rock during riots in Darlington was jailed for 18 months. Cole Stewart, 18, was part of a group of about 30 who gathered outside a mosque in the town on 5 August.

    The longest sentence of the day went to Guy Sullivan, 43, who was jailed for three years after he grabbed a police officer’s baton in Plymouth and ran off with it during disorder in the city. He admitted a charge of violent disorder relating to his conduct at the protests on 5 August.

    There were also prosecutions relating to social media. A Romanian man who posted a TikTok video falsely claiming that he was running for his life was jailed for three months at southern Derbyshire magistrates court, according to the Mail Online.

    Dimitrie Stoica, 35, is understood to have posted a video on Wednesday evening claiming to his 700 followers that “extreme rightwing rioters” were chasing him, warning “They’re coming. Everyone get back.” When police spoke to him, they confirmed he was not in fact being chased. Stoica admitted to sending a false communication with intent to cause harm.

    Rapper Omar Abdirizak, 30, appeared in court after allegedly posting a video accusing Tommy Robinson of urging people to attack mosques. He pleaded not guilty to the new Online Safety Act offence of conveying information which was known to be false and intending to cause harm.

    Abdirizak, known as Twista Cheese, said in a video that Robinson has been “running his mouth, saying ‘We’re going to attack the mosques.”’

    At the same hearing, Abdirizak pleaded guilty to possessing cannabis and racially aggravated harassment, alarm or distress.

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