Western Morning News

Teenager from Cornwall is UK’s youngest terrorist

- EMILY PENNINK wmnnewsdes­k@reachplc.com

THE teenage leader of a neo-Nazi cell has become one of Britain’s youngest convicted terrorists.

The boy, from Cornwall, was aged just 13 when he began gathering terrorist material and went on to share far-right extremist ideology in online chat rooms at the age of 14.

Yesterday, he appeared remotely from Plymouth before the Old Bailey to be sentenced, having admitted twelve offences – two of disseminat­ion of terrorist documents and ten of possession of terrorist material.

The court heard that between October, 2018 and July, 2019, the youth collected a significan­t amount of far-right material and manuals and was active on online platforms, expressing racist, homophobic and anti-Semitic views. He talked about “gassing” Jewish people, hanging gay people and wanting to “shoot up their parades”, the court heard.

In the summer of 2019, he became the British cell leader of the FKD – Feu-erk-rieg Division – a neo-Nazi group that idolises the likes of Norwegian terrorist Anders Breivik, the court heard.

The court heard the banned network favoured actions over words and encouraged individual­s to commit “lone wolf” attacks.

The defendant liaised with FKD’s “commander” in Estonia and was responsibl­e for vetting and recruiting members and propaganda, it was claimed.

One of his five recruits was teenager Paul Dunleavy, who was convicted of terrorism offences relating to his activities as a member of FKD in 2019 and with whom he discussed the acquisitio­n of firearms, the court was told.

The defendant also allegedly commission­ed a “Nuke London” poster which bore an image of an atom bomb cloud explosion over the Houses of Parliament with the slogan “Sterilise the cesspit that you call London”.

Police raided the defendant’s home on July 23, 2019, as a result of informatio­n which suggested that he had been trying to construct a weapon. No weapons were found but his mobile phone and computer were seized.

During the search, officers found a Nazi flag and a copy of a neo-Nazi text depicting post-apocalypti­c sadistic violence.

The number “1488” – a wellknown Nazi symbol – was also painted on to the garden shed.

In a police interview, the defendant, who is now aged 16, denied having had any racist, homophobic or anti-Semitic views, and said his comments and posts were just “to look cool”. He claimed that he had been considerin­g leaving FKD for about a month.

Prosecutor Naomi Parsons said: “The Crown do not accept he was planning to leave the group.

“The age is the alarming factor and his conduct betrays a maturity beyond his chronologi­cal age.”

The defendant, who is on bail, attended the Old Bailey remotely. He had sentencing delayed for a week by Judge Mark Dennis QC, from Plymouth.

In mitigation, Deni Matthews spoke of his troubled upbringing without a positive parental role model in his life.

The lawyer said: “A damaged young man sought approval by expressing views he certainly does not ascribe to now and was unlikely to have ascribed to genuinely at the time.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom