Trio face first potential jail terms on violent disorder charge after riots

Three men who admitted their part in riots face the first potential prison sentences for a charge of violent disorder following widespread violence across the country.

Liam James Riley, Derek Drummond and Declan Geiran are scheduled to be sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court on Wednesday.

Drummond, 58, of Pool Street, Liverpool, is set to become the first person to be sentenced for participating in the violent disorder in Southport on July 30 following the fatal knife attack on three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed holiday club.

He previously pleaded guilty to violent disorder and assaulting an emergency worker, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.

Riley, of Walton Road, Kirkdale, Liverpool, and Geiran, of Kelso Road, Liverpool, will be sentenced for their part in the rioting in Liverpool city centre after both also pleaded guilty to violent disorder, with Geiran also admitting to arson of a police vehicle.

Colour-coded map showing areas where violent unrest has occurred and on what dates
(PA Graphics)

Aaron Johnson is accused of distributing a recording of visual images which were threatening, abusive or insulting intending to stir up racial hatred on Monday in Stockport, Greater Manchester.

He is due to appear at Manchester Magistrates’ Court alongside four other men who are accused of violent disorder following rioting in the Piccadilly Gardens area of the city centre on Saturday August 4.

Julie Sweeney, 53, will appear at Warrington Magistrates’ Court after being charged with publishing written material to stir up racial hatred, the CPS said.

Elsewhere, a man has been charged with possessing a wooden stick as a weapon during a gathering in Birmingham.

TV coverage of the large gathering on Monday night led to claims on social media that someone was armed with a sword near a roundabout in the Bordesley Green area of Birmingham.

A number of counter-protesters gathered in the area after social media rumours of a far-right march being staged there.

Shehraz Sarwar from Birmingham was arrested and charged by West Midlands Police following the incident on Monday and will appear at Birmingham Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday.

Court documents released ahead of his appearance state that he is alleged to have possessed an offensive weapon – “namely a wooden stick with a cord wrapped around it” – in the Belchers Lane area.

Also in the West Midlands, Davina O’Shaughnessy, 45, of Sandwell, will appear at Wolverhampton Magistrates’ Court charged with racially/religiously aggravated harassment, the CPS said.

A 16-year-old boy, of no registered address, will appear in Newcastle-under-Lyme Magistrates’ Court in Stoke-on-Trent charged with violent disorder and assaulting an emergency worker.

The CPS said Steven Hall, 60, faces a racially aggravated harassment charge at Chester Magistrates’ Court in connection with the widespread disorder.

In Plymouth, six people are due in court charged with violent disorder following a protest in the port city on Monday night which saw police officers injured and two members of the public taken to hospital.

Devon and Cornwall Police said the four adults and two 17-year-old boys have been charged under Section 2 of the Public Order Act 1986 and will appear at the city’s magistrates’ court.

Two teenagers are due to appear in youth court in Sheffield in connection with riots outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Rotherham.

They follow the case of self-employed builder Joshua Simpson, who became the first person to be convicted following rioting outside the hotel after he admitted assaulting a police officer.

Also in Sheffield, Jake Turton, 38, of Barnsley, will appear in the city’s magistrates’ court charged with violent disorder and driving a motor vehicle without its owner’s consent.

Two men have also been charged following violent disorder in Darlington on Monday evening, Durham Police said.

Cole Stewart, of Victoria Road, Darlington, and Brandon Welch, of Warkworth Way, Darlington, both 18, have been charged with violent disorder and have been remanded in custody to appear at Teesside Magistrates’ Court.

The court appearances come as police remain braced for planned unrest by “hateful and divisive groups” as they monitor reports of at least 30 possible gatherings and threats against immigration law specialists.

– Advertisement –
– Advertisement –