Bristol Post

Pensioner sent threatenin­g messages to city mayor

- John HOUSEMAN bristolpos­tnews@localworld.co.uk

AThe emails Mr Fleetwood sent on that night were grossly offensive and really aggressive Prosecutor Andrew Page

PENSIONER has been convicted of sending abusive emails to the Mayor of Bristol in the wake of the toppling of the statue of slave trader Edward Colston, prosecutor­s said.

Fleetwood Spence, 72, sent six “grossly offensive and really aggressive” messages to Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees a day after the controvers­ial statue was pulled from its plinth.

The bronze memorial to the 17th century slave merchant was pulled down during a Black Lives Matter protest in Bristol city centre on June 7 last year, before being dumped in the harbour.

The following day – after Mr Rees said he could not condone the damage to the statue but felt no “loss” over its removal – Spence sent the emails to the mayor’s office using the anonymous Guerrilla mail service.

The Crown Prosecutio­n Service said the emails to Mr Rees were abusive, aggressive and threatened violence to those who supported the removal of the statue.

The police were informed and investigat­ions revealed all the emails originated from Spence’s IP address.

Officers from Merseyside Police visited his home address in Irby, Wirral, and showed him the emails, which he did not think were offensive.

The CPS said Spence was later interviewe­d on August 20 and admitted he had sent the emails and that he felt embarrasse­d about them.

He admitted he had been drinking when he sent them and said he feared the protesters would go on to damage statues of the wartime leader Winston Churchill.

On January 11 at Liverpool Magistrate­s’ Court, Spence pleaded guilty to sending malicious communicat­ions, the CPS said.

He was given a 24-week overnight curfew and must not leave his home between 7pm and 7am. Spence was also ordered to pay £85 costs and a victim surcharge of £95.

Associate prosecutor Andrew Page, of the CPS, said: “The emails Mr Fleetwood sent on that night were grossly offensive and really aggressive.

“The fact that he had been drinking when he sent them is irrelevant. He sent them to a public official who was in no way condoning what had happened in Bristol the day before.

“Mr Fleetwood is clearly embarrasse­d at what he did on that night and pleaded guilty to the offence.

“People sometimes think they can write what they want to others, on their devices behind closed doors.

“But there are laws to protect the public from malicious and offensive communicat­ions and, on that night, Mr Fleetwood crossed the line into criminalit­y and he has paid the price.

“I hope this case is a lesson to others who take to their keyboards to spread offence and upset.”

Colston’s involvemen­t in the slave trade through the British-based Royal African Company was the source of much of the money which he bestowed on Bristol.

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 ??  ?? The Colston statue being thrown into Bristol harbour; Above, Bristol Mayor marvin Rees
The Colston statue being thrown into Bristol harbour; Above, Bristol Mayor marvin Rees

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