The Scotsman

Life sentence for man who pledged the ‘demise’ of Islam

● ‘Neo-nazi’ found with arms cache and bomb making material in home

- By WILMA RILEY

A Neo-nazi convicted of planning terror attacks against Muslims and mosques in Aberdeen was jailed for life yesterday.

At the High Court in Glasgow judge Lord Burns told Connor Ward, 25, from Banff, Aberdeensh­ire, that he must serve at least six years before he is eligible for parole.

Ward, who was caught with an arms cache and bomb making equipment kept a list of mosques and pledged the “demise” of Islam.

Lord Burns told him: “The jury found you guilty and must have been satisfied you were in the course of preparing acts of terrorism.

“The jury’s view was that you formed an intention to attack a Mosque or Mosques in Aberdeen and would have acted alone. You had reached the stage of identifyin­g your targets and expressed threats against Muslims.”

Lord Burns said that if Ward had carried out the acts of terrorism, “it would have had catastroph­ic results”.

The judge added: “You had reached the stage of buying materials and you planned to cause serious injury at the least. Your obsession with weapons and explosives and your extreme right-wing attitudes presents serious risk to the public.”

It will be up to the parole board to decide when, or if, he is released.

Ward showed no emotion as he was led away to begin his sentence.

Police who searched his Banff, Aberdeensh­ire, home found hundreds of ball bearings, which could be used in pipe bombs, and rocket tubes capable of firing projectile­s.

A stun gun, hundreds of knuckle dusters, knives and metal bars and deactivate­d bullets were also discovered.

Officers discovered the lethal hoard after receiving a tip-off that Ward had broken strict firearms legislatio­n by buying a stun gun from abroad.

They also found Ward had acquired a mobile phone signal jamming device and a machinefor­pickinguph­idden bugs and downloaded tens of thousands of documents from the internet on firearms and survival techniques.

The files also contained extreme right-wing propaganda and documents about military tactics. A map showing the addresses of five Mosques in the Aberdeen area were discovered on Ward’s computer.

They also found that Ward, who told jurors he thought Hitler had made mistakes, had started to compile a book called Combat 18 British

0 Connor Ward a former psychiatri­c patient, claimed he was suffering from mental illness Mosque Address Book. Combat 18 is the name of an extreme British right-wing paramilita­ry group

On the title page of the book, Ward had written: “This book is dedicated to all that follow Mohammed and the Islamic faith. You will all soon suffer your demise.”

Ward, a former psychiatri­c patient, claimed he was suffering from mental illness at the time He said he believed the world was going to end in 2012 and he wanted to survive the apocalypse.

But jurors did not believe him and returned guilty verdicts on two charges of breaching the Terrorism Act 2000 and the Terrorism Act 2006 between 26 February, 2011, and 21 November, 2014.

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