A man from Bristol, England, has been sentenced to nearly two years in prison after taking part in anti-mass migration protests. He is accused of being “racist and abusive” to counter-protestors and shouting at a police dog. Details of the alleged racist abuse have not been been made readily available to the public.
Bradley McCarthy, 34, was convicted this week at Bristol Crown Court and given 20 months in prison for this role in the anti-mass migration protests, sparked by the murder of three young girls in Southport, allegedly by a teenager with an African migration background.
Prosecutor Emily Evans stated that video footage showed McCarthy “goading [counter-protesters] to cross the police line” and shouting in the face of a police dog. He is also said to have attended two other anti-mass migration protests.
The sentence is just the latest in Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s crackdown on Britons protesting mass migration. Some have already been arrested or convicted for shouting at police, posting “inaccurate information” online, or saying phrases like “Who the f**k is Allah?”
Prime Minister Starmer has been accused of presiding over two-tier policing during the protests, as mobs of Muslims in Birmingham went on a rampage smashing pubs, harassing journalists, and targeting white people with no police presence or intervention.
West Midlands Police Superintendent Emlyn Richards later said that the Muslim community told they authorities the would police themselves, with the force acquiescing.