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    Judge urges consideration of charge carrying heftier sentence for main rioters

    By Josh Payne,

    2 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3nnWq1_0uxdrhvn00

    A judge has encouraged prosecutors to consider charging offenders who played central roles in the recent disorder in parts of the UK with rioting, a charge that carries a maximum sentence of 10 years.

    The words of Judge John Thackray KC, the Recorder of Hull , came after a three-year prison term was handed to Connor Whiteley, who kicked a female police officer to the ground during riots in the Yorkshire city.

    Whiteley, 26, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and assaulting an emergency worker, after playing a “prominent role” in the “racist, hate-fuelled mob violence” that unfolded in the city on August 3.

    Hull Crown Court heard he was at the front of a group confronting police who were trying to protect a hotel known to house asylum seekers, and was seen charging at officers.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1jLDlD_0uxdrhvn00

    Whiteley was also part of a group that targeted a garage, setting cars alight and threatening staff, who were forced to lock themselves inside.

    Sentencing him on Wednesday, the judge said: “The prosecution do need to look, for those who are playing front and central roles, at the alternative charge of riot rather than violent disorder.”

    Violent disorder carries a maximum sentence of five years, and the maximum term for rioting is 10 years, according to sentencing guidelines.

    Elsewhere, at Chester Crown Court , a 53-year-old woman who lived a “quiet, sheltered life” was jailed for 15 months after she posted an online message saying: “Blow the mosque up with the adults in it.”

    Julie Sweeney sent the comment on August 3 to a local community Facebook group from her home in Church Lawton, Cheshire , which was later reported to the police.

    She pleaded guilty to sending a communication to convey a threat of death or serious harm.

    Sentencing, Judge Steven Everett, the Honorary Recorder of Chester, said: “I don’t think anyone is suggesting that the defendant would have been involved in that herself, but so-called keyboard warriors like her have to learn to take responsibility for their language, particularly in the context of the disorder that was going on around the country.”

    In Sheffield, a 60-year-old man who pulled a police officer to the ground and grabbed a riot shield as the officer was trying to protect another hotel housing asylum seekers, was jailed for two years and eight months.

    The prosecution do need to look, for those who are playing front and central roles, at the alternative charge of riot rather than violent disorder

    Judge John Thackray KC

    Body-worn camera footage was played in court showing Glyn Guest repeatedly being pushed back by a riot shield as he approached a line of police six times outside the Holiday Inn Express, at Manvers, Rotherham, on Sunday August 4.

    At the same court, father-of-three Trevor Lloyd, 49, who was part of a mob that stormed the hotel, was also jailed for three years.

    At Manchester Magistrates’ Court, a man who was convicted of encouraging violence told a district judge: “I’m guilty miss, but I’m not sure what it means.”

    Warren Gilchrest, 52, pleaded guilty to violent disorder after joining a “large group of far-right protesters” who gathered in Piccadilly Gardens on August 3.

    Two men in Bristol were both jailed for just under three years for their part in violent disorder in the city.

    Dominic Capaldi, 34, was handed 34 months in prison after he was captured on police bodycam footage throwing objects towards officers in the city’s Castle Park

    Daniel Russell, 47, was jailed for 32 months after he was seen kicking a black man, who may have been part of an anti-racism protest.

    In Birmingham, Habeeb Khan pleaded not guilty at the city’s crown court to a charge of possessing an imitation AK-47 with intent to cause “members of the EDL” (English Defence League) to believe violence would be used against them.

    Khan, 49, of Sparkbrook, Birmingham, who is being held in custody, also denied sending a communication threatening death or serious harm between August 4 and 6 in a video uploaded to X, formerly Twitter.

    The Metropolitan Police said more people have been charged over disorder in Whitehall on July 31, including a 14-year-old boy.

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