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The wife of a Tory councillor has pleaded guilty to publishing written material to stir up racial hatred following the Southport stabbings

Childminder Lucy Connolly, appearing via videolink from HMP Peterborough, admitted making the post about asylum seekers at Northampton Crown Court after she was previously arrested and re-arrested in the first half of August.

She published a post on her X account, which she later deleted, which read: “Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f*****g hotels full of the bastards for all I care… If that makes me racist, so be it.”

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Connolly wrote the post on the day of the knife attack in Southport, Merseyside, when a group of children attending a Taylor Swift-themed dance class were attacked.

False information claiming the attacker was a Muslim asylum seeker spread online and led to riots across the UK.

Three young girls were killed in the attack on 29 July, while eight other children and two adults were injured.

Rioting broke out in Southport after the fatal stabbing of three girls. Pic: PA
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Rioting broke out in Southport (pictured) then across the UK after the fatal stabbing of three girls. Pic: PA

Connolly, from Northampton, later apologised for acting on “false and malicious” information and appeared to have subsequently deleted her X account.

She is the wife of Conservative West Northamptonshire councillor Raymond Connolly.

Speaking outside the court, he said he was “relieved” it was over as it had been “traumatic” for his wife and three children.

Mr Connolly said she was “an upset housewife” and “just a middle aged mother” who got dragged into the situation by misinformation spreading online.

“The stuff I hear is not really Lucy, she’s probably the opposite of what she’s having to admit to but she knows she’s overstepped the mark and there’s consequences for it,” he said.

“Hopefully she’ll be able to learn from this and move on with her life.”

Mr Connolly added that their son had died so when his wife sees any child get harmed “she will kick off”.

And he said she feels the “Tory tag” is unfair but “she will cope with whatever they throw at her, she’s got strong resilience, she’ll come back a bigger person”.

Their son, Harry, died aged 19 months in 2012 from dehydration after a series of basic errors by NHS medics, an inquest found.

His parents took the toddler to hospital with severe diarrhoea and vomiting, where he was wrongly diagnosed with a stomach upset and sent home before they returned two days later and medical staff turned them away.

Then a GP failed to diagnose the real problem and Mr Connolly woke up at 4am to Harry not breathing.

Elsie Dot Stancombe, Alice Dasilva Aguiar and Bebe King.
Pic: Merseyside Police
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Elsie Dot Stancombe, Alice Dasilva Aguiar and Bebe King were killed in the attack. Pic: Merseyside Police

People accused of violence or inciting violence during the riots have been fast tracked through the justice system.

In Manchester, the sentencing of a 12-year-old, who cannot be named due to his age, twice involved in the violence was adjourned because his mother has gone on holiday to Ibiza.

District Judge Joanne Hirst told Manchester Magistrates’ Court she was “frankly astonished” that the boy’s mother had decided to fly abroad for a five-day sunshine break, with her son due in court having admitted two counts of violent disorder.

The mother has been issued with a parental summons to appear before the court when the judge passes sentence on 11 September.

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The boy, who was accompanied by his uncle, earlier admitted being part of a mob that attacked a bus outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Manchester on 31 July.

Days later he was part of a group filmed kicking the windows of a vape shop and throwing a missile at a police van.

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The crypto fund domicile decision: EU or the UK?

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The crypto fund domicile decision: EU or the UK?

The crypto fund domicile decision: EU or the UK?

As the EU’s MiCA regulation and the UK’s evolving crypto laws diverge, fund managers face a key choice: to opt for the EU’s legal certainty and passporting or the UK’s flexible, innovation-driven approach.

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Sir Keir Starmer hits out at politicians who ‘shout and scream but do nothing’ over grooming gangs

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Sir Keir Starmer hits out at politicians who 'shout and scream but do nothing' over grooming gangs

Sir Keir Starmer has said he gets “frustrated” with politicians who “shout and scream but do nothing” as he defended past comments about a grooming gangs inquiry.

Speaking to Sky News’s political editor Beth Rigby, the prime minister was asked if he regretted saying in January that those calling for a national probe into paedophile rings were “jumping on a far-right bandwagon” – given he has now agreed to one.

Politics latest: Baroness Casey asks people to ‘keep calm’ about grooming gang ethnicity data

Sir Keir said he was “really clear” he was talking about the Tories, who were demanding an inquiry they never set up when they were in government.

He said: “I was calling out those politicians.

“I am frustrated with politics when people shout and scream a lot and do nothing when they’ve got the opportunity to do it. It’s one of the worst aspects of politics, in my view.”

Sir Keir also said there “must be accountability” for authorities who “shied away” from talking about the ethnicity of perpetrators for fear of being branded racist, as exposed in a report by Baroness Casey published on Monday.

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Asked if he is happy for “social workers, policemen and people that failed” to be held accountable, the prime minister said: “Where the inquiry uncovers failure or wrongdoing, then there should absolutely be accountability.

“That is amongst the purposes of an inquiry, and it’s a statutory inquiry… which will therefore mean there is power to compel evidence of witnesses because it’s important that it is comprehensive and important that it gets to every single issue. And as part of that process, there’s accountability for individuals who did wrong.”

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Data dismissed ‘Asian grooming gangs’

Baroness Casey was asked to produce an audit of sexual abuse carried out by grooming gangs in England and Wales in January, when comments by tech billionaire Elon Musk brought the scandal back into the spotlight.

The government initially resisted calls from the Tories for a national inquiry into grooming gangs, saying they wanted to focus on implementing the recommendations of Professor Alexis Jay’s seven-year review into child abuse.

The review concluded in 2022 but the Conservatives did not implement its recommendations before they lost the election last July.

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Nationwide police operation on grooming gangs announced

The government’s position has changed following Baroness Casey’s audit, which recommended an inquiry.

Her report found that ethnicity data is not recorded for two-thirds of grooming gang perpetrators.

However at a local level in three police forces – Greater Manchester, South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire – “there has been a disproportionality of group-based child sexual exploitation offending by men of Asian ethnicity”.

The cross bench peer said instead of looking into whether ethnicity or cultural factors played a part, authorities “avoided the topic altogether for fear of appearing racist”, and this warranted further investigation.

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Coinbase is seeking SEC approval for ‘tokenized equities’ — Report

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Coinbase is seeking SEC approval for ‘tokenized equities’ — Report

Coinbase is seeking SEC approval for ‘tokenized equities’ — Report

If approved by the US regulator, the investment offering could have Coinbase competing against other stock trading platforms.

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