During the incident in Rotherham at least one guest in the hotel was physically attacked and repeatedly punched until police were able to clear the floor, it is claimed.
The man who filmed footage from inside the hotel, an Iraqi Kurd called Abdullah, told the BBC that he was left fearing he was about to be killed during the disturbing outbreak of violence.
He told the broadcaster that those inside the building, which included members of staff, were left stranded and ‘scared’.
He said: ‘All the time, all the people saying [ outside were saying]: ‘Come outside. We will kill you if you come outside’.
More than 50 police officers were left injured as a result of the riot, which saw windows smashed in and asylum seekers fearing for their lives as the mob, whipped up by far-right rhetoric online, sought to storm the hotel.
Rotherham rioter who bragged about his involvement is arrested
South Yorkshire Police is hunting suspects in the Rotherham riots that saw thugs attempt to storm a hotel
Hundreds of people were involved in the disturbance, which targeted a hotel housing around 200 asylum seekers
At least one guest in the hotel was physically attacked and repeatedly punched until police were able to clear the floor
A number of convictions have already been secured following earlier appeals by South Yorkshire Police after the August 4 incident
South Yorkshire Police has said its investigation continues ‘at pace’. It has vowed to find all of those involved in violent disorder or rioting
Rotherham rioters attack police with wooden planks outside hotel
More than 50 police officers were left injured as a result of the riot, which saw windows smashed in and asylum seekers fearing for their lives
Some of the images in the appeal have been derived from CCTV. Others appear to have been extracted directly from police officers’ bodyworn cameras
Moment rioter Glyn Guest pulls officer to the ground by the shield
Some scrawled aggressive graffiti on its walls, writing ‘scum’ and ‘get out England’ while others set bins alight and hurled them at hotel windows.
Several people have already been convicted in connection with the deeply disturbing incident, which prompted Sir Keir Starmer to label the incident and others like it in the wake of the Southport stabbings ‘far-right thuggery’.
The riots were stoked as misinformation about the Southport stabbing suspect circulated online – claiming, falsely, that he was a Muslim asylum seeker and giving a fake name.
It was shared by a number of high-profile far right figures online and a Russian-affiliated ‘news’ website.
Ông ta cũng thừa nhận hành vi phá hoại hình sự mang tính phân biệt chủng tộc liên quan đến vụ việc liên quan đến chiếc BMW và làm hỏng chín chiếc xe khác trong một vụ tấn công vào một gara.
The court previously heard that Honey boasted to one shop employee he was ‘famous and all over social media’, as images of his looting spree went viral.
He was described in a letter written by the officer to a judge as ‘over-confident’ and someone who ‘presented with no remorse’.
Footage of the BMW incident showed Honey pulling the passenger door open as a man inside tried to close it to protect himself.
Three Romanian occupants of the car got out with their hands raised in a gesture of surrender and fled to a nearby hotel, the court heard.
The driver said he feared for his life after more than 100 ‘angry’ men attempted to drag him from the car, punched him in the head and attempted to strike him with a metal bar.
At a previous hearing, the court was played footage of Honey looting soap store Lush, where he could be seen taking one of its branded bags and walking around the shop filling it with products.
A victim impact statement from the manager of the Lush store said the incident had ‘massively impacted’ the staff, some of whom ‘cannot bring themselves to come back to the store as they are frightened it will happen again’.
The probation officer also detailed how Honey had described how he ‘went into Greggs to have a drink as the pepper spray made him thirsty’.
A sentencing hearing earlier in the week was adjourned after a prison probation officer said Honey had asked him ‘if he wanted his autograph because he was famous’.
The court was told that his moment of bravado could have undermined Honey’s claim of being ‘genuinely remorseful’.
But after hearing that Honey had developmental issues due to his ‘difficult start in life’, Judge John Thackray KC said his alleged comment ‘does not have the significance it would otherwise have’.
The judge told Honey: ‘I’m not going to hear any evidence about comments which you may or may not have made in the prison setting.
‘I’m not going to give them any relevance. If your defence say that there is now genuine remorse, I’ll accept that submission.’
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John Honey’s (left) and David Wilkinson’s (right) mugshots after they were snared by Humberside Police
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Paul Williams, 45, was jailed for two years and two months after threatening riot police during what a judge called an ‘orgy of mindless destruction, violence and disorder’
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Newcastle Crown Court was told Williams had only nipped into the city centre for a takeaway
Wilkinson was jailed for six years – the toughest sentence yet – after admitting he played a ‘prominent role’ in the violence and disorder in Hull.
At other points during the day of disorder, Wilkinson spat, threw missiles and pushed wheelie bins at a police line protecting a hotel known to house asylum seekers.
He appeared to be holding nunchucks – a martial arts weapon – at one point, it was said.
Meanwhile, lawyers for shirtless riot yob Paul Williams A 45-year-old man who was at the ‘forefront’ of an ‘orgy of mindless destruction, violence and disorder’ in Sunderland had only popped into the city centre to collect a takeaway, a court has heard.
A Shoezone store was also devastated by rioters – who had originally taken to the streets under the pretence of protecting children in the wake of the Southport stabbings
A car burns in Sunderland town centre following the riots. Many arrests have been made in the days since the shameful disorder
He noted that the defendant’s behaviour appeared to spur on the rest of the mob, saying it was ‘clearly inflaming the situation the square’, especially after he removed his shirt.
The judge rejected Ms Allinson’s submissions that her client’s prison sentenced should be suspended due to the caring responsibilities he has for his son.
The tough sentences came as a second riot charge was brought by police – leaving violent disorder suspects across the country awaiting news on whether they will be accused of the more serious offence.
Judge John Thackray KC said prosecutors should look at charging people with riot instead of violent disorder – which carries a sentence of up to 10 years in prison rather than five.
He said during a sentencing hearing at Hull Crown Court this week: ‘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.’