Nottingham Post

Neo-nazi group teen has sentence halved

FORMER ARNOLD YOUTH WAS PART OF FAR-RIGHT ORGANISATI­ON

- By RACHEL LEE & JESS GLASS rachel.lee@reachplc.com @Rsloper_dt

A NOTTINGHAM teenager locked up for membership of the banned neo-nazi terrorist group National Action (NA) has had his sentence halved by the Court of Appeal.

Connor Scothern, 19, was handed an 18-month term of detention in a young offenders’ institutio­n in June after a jury convicted the teenager of belonging to the extreme right-wing group.

The organisati­on, labelled “racist, anti-semitic and homophobic” by then-home secretary Amber Rudd, was proscribed after a series of rallies and incidents, including praise of the murder of MP Jo Cox.

Following a trial at Birmingham Crown Court, Scothern was convicted alongside three others – former Miss Hitler beauty pageant contestant Alice Cutter, Mark Jones and Garry Jack – after all four denied membership of NA.

The prosecutio­n told jurors Scothern, formerly of Bagnall Avenue, Arnold, was “one of the most active members of the group”, and “considered future leadership material”.

Another leading member of NA told the trial how Scothern had “driven himself into poverty” by travelling to member meetings as well as self-funding 1,500 stickers bearing Adolf Hitler’s image and calling for a “final solution” – in reference to the Nazis’ genocide of Jews.

Scothern was aged 15 and 16 when a member of the organisati­on in 2016 and 2017, but 19 at the time of sentencing.

At the Court of Appeal, his lawyers argued as he was sentenced after turning 18, Scothern would have to serve two-thirds of his sentence before being considered eligible for release by the Parole Board due to the nature of his offence.

They said if he had been sentenced for the same offence when he had committed it as a youth, the only possible custodial sentence would have been a youth detention and training order, where an 18-month order would have resulted in nine months’ detention before being released under supervisio­n.

His lawyers, therefore, argued the original sentence should not have exceeded nine months in a Young Offenders’ Institutio­n and “was not only wrong in principle but was also unlawful”.

They also argued factors mitigating Scothern’s offence were not adequately taken into account at the original sentencing.

In his judgment, Mr Justice Jeremy Baker quashed the original 18-month sentence, replacing it with a sentence of nine months’ detention in a young offenders’ institutio­n.

But he dismissed the argument that Scothern’s mitigation was not appropriat­ely taken into account, noting that the sentencing judge had accepted Scothern’s lack of maturity and a degree of social isolation and that he had no previous conviction­s.

The judge, sitting with Lord Justice Dingemans and Judge Paul Sloan QC, said thatm, aside from the point of law regarding Scothern’s age at sentencing, “there could have been no criticism of the sentence”.

He also said he was “sceptical” of Scothern’s claim that he had begun to lose interest in National Action prior to it being proscribed, which was accepted in the teenager’s favour during his original sentencing.

 ?? JOE GIDDENS/PA ?? Connor Scothern was sentenced for being a member of the far-right terrorist group National Action
JOE GIDDENS/PA Connor Scothern was sentenced for being a member of the far-right terrorist group National Action

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