This article is from the source 'independent' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/ethan-stables-trial-latest-convicted-terror-offence-neo-nazi-far-right-gay-pride-cumbria-leeds-court-a8194996.html
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Ethan Stables trial: Neo-Nazi convicted of planning terror attack at gay pride event | Ethan Stables trial: Neo-Nazi convicted of planning terror attack at gay pride event |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A neo-Nazi has been convicted of planning a terror attack at a gay pride event after posting violent homophobic rants online. | |
Armed police stopped Ethan Stables as he was travelling to the celebration at a pub in Cumbria, finding weapons including a machete and axe at his home. | |
They had been tipped off by a member of a far-right Facebook group who saw the unemployed 20-year-old post a message saying he was “going to war” and planned to “slaughter every single one of the gay bastards”. | They had been tipped off by a member of a far-right Facebook group who saw the unemployed 20-year-old post a message saying he was “going to war” and planned to “slaughter every single one of the gay bastards”. |
Leeds Crown Court was shown footage of Stables saying “gays look nicer on fire” and burning a rainbow flag before his arrest on 23 June. | Leeds Crown Court was shown footage of Stables saying “gays look nicer on fire” and burning a rainbow flag before his arrest on 23 June. |
Prosecutor Jonathan Sandiford said Stables espoused homophobic, racist and Nazi views online, taking a selfie with a swastika flag hanging on his bedroom wall. | Prosecutor Jonathan Sandiford said Stables espoused homophobic, racist and Nazi views online, taking a selfie with a swastika flag hanging on his bedroom wall. |
The defendant searched online for information on joining neo-Nazi groups Combat 18 and National Action – a banned terrorist organisation – while researching how to prepare for a “race war”. | |
The jury was told Stables, who was expelled from school after putting another pupil in a headlock, was interested in the Columbine High School massacre and viewed graphic footage of terror attacks, torture, massacres, executions and extreme violence. | |
Evidence presented in court showed he made a series of Google searches on a prospective attack, including one reading “I want to go on a killing spree” and another on “how to be a terrorist”. | |
Police examination of his devices showed he also searched “how to make chemical poison”, “what is prison like for a murderer” and “do you get haircuts in prison”. | Police examination of his devices showed he also searched “how to make chemical poison”, “what is prison like for a murderer” and “do you get haircuts in prison”. |
Stables had also researched how to make a bomb at home, with investigators finding a collection of match heads in his flat. | |
While swapping messages with fellow extremists, he blamed the fact that he was unemployed on “faggots, n******, spastics” and the Equalities Act. | While swapping messages with fellow extremists, he blamed the fact that he was unemployed on “faggots, n******, spastics” and the Equalities Act. |
Stables also expressed hatred of Muslims and Jews, claiming in a WhatApp message a month before his arrest: “My country is being raped. I might just become a skinhead and kill people.” | Stables also expressed hatred of Muslims and Jews, claiming in a WhatApp message a month before his arrest: “My country is being raped. I might just become a skinhead and kill people.” |
Stables denied preparing terrorist acts and making threats to kill, claiming he was only venting his anger online. | Stables denied preparing terrorist acts and making threats to kill, claiming he was only venting his anger online. |
The defendant, who told the court he is bisexual and has an autism spectrum condition, said he was not carrying out reconnaissance of the New Empire pub in Barrow when he was arrested. | The defendant, who told the court he is bisexual and has an autism spectrum condition, said he was not carrying out reconnaissance of the New Empire pub in Barrow when he was arrested. |
Prosecutors said he became aware the venue was to host a LGBT+ pride night and travelled there to “take photographs [and do] reconnaissance of that public house with a view to launching an attack later that evening”. | |
Defending Stables, barrister Patrick Upward QC said he was not a white supremacist but a “white fantasist”, describing him as “lonely and inadequate”. | Defending Stables, barrister Patrick Upward QC said he was not a white supremacist but a “white fantasist”, describing him as “lonely and inadequate”. |
He told the jury Stables would sit at night on a wall outside the local jobcentre for six hours at a time as he had no WiFi at his home, asking: “How can that be regarded as normal?” | He told the jury Stables would sit at night on a wall outside the local jobcentre for six hours at a time as he had no WiFi at his home, asking: “How can that be regarded as normal?” |
Stables, of Egerton Court in Barrow, claimed he was a liberal and adopted a right-wing persona to fit in with people he chatted to online. | Stables, of Egerton Court in Barrow, claimed he was a liberal and adopted a right-wing persona to fit in with people he chatted to online. |
His mother told the court he became radicalised after a trip to Germany to see a young woman, while Stables said he had been “brainwashed” by right-wing extremists he met while living in hostels. | His mother told the court he became radicalised after a trip to Germany to see a young woman, while Stables said he had been “brainwashed” by right-wing extremists he met while living in hostels. |
The verdict came after another far-right extremist, Darren Osborne, was jailed for life for launching the Finsbury Park terror attack. | The verdict came after another far-right extremist, Darren Osborne, was jailed for life for launching the Finsbury Park terror attack. |
The father-of-four killed one man and injured several others when he ploughed a van into Muslim worshippers leaving Ramadan prayers in June. | The father-of-four killed one man and injured several others when he ploughed a van into Muslim worshippers leaving Ramadan prayers in June. |
Security services have warned of an increasing threat from both Islamists and the far-right as the UK’s terror threat level stands at “severe”, meaning further attacks are highly likely. | |
The number of white people among a record number of terror suspects being arrested in the UK has risen dramatically over the past year, making up a third of the total. | |
The spike was partly be accounted for by a series of crackdowns on National Action, which has several alleged members due in court. | |
Among them are British soldiers accused of joining the organisation – which was banned in December 2016 – and a man who allegedly plotted to murder a Labour MP with a machete. | |
In the wake of Osborne’s convictions, Amber Rudd said the Government would soon be publishing a new counter-terrorism strategy setting out its approach to tackling anyone who seeks to attack Britain, its values and way of life. | |
“This Government will continue to be unwavering in our resolve to combat all forms of terrorism, whatever the underlying motivation,” the Home Secretary added. | |
Additional reporting by PA | Additional reporting by PA |