By MICHAEL SLOVANUS
KEIR “Stasi” Starmer, Britain’s new socialist dictator, has launched a cruel scheme to terrorize anti-immigration Britons by releasing serving criminals from jail and filling their vacant cells with hundreds of people charged with riot-related offences.
Media reported that 5500 people would be released in September and October under an existing government plan called Operation Early Dawn, brought into being because of serious overcrowding in the UK prison system, but now apparently triggered by the recent UK riots.
Early releases will not apply to people convicted of terrorism, sex offences, domestic abuse and some violent offences. The government confirmed people involved in the riots also won’t be eligible, Sky News reported.
By August 19, Starmer’s police had kicked down doors across the country to arrest 927 people and charge 466 of them for throwing rocks or bricks at police or various lesser offences associated with the recent riots – even including posting “hate” on social media, which in one case saw Wayne O’Rourke, 35, being jailed for three years.
The BBC made a point by posting photos of some of the convicted rioters whose jail sentences ranged from 20 months to six years. A 21-year-old mother who “threw water from a bottle at police” was released on bail but told by the judge her she could still possibly face jail.
So in Starmer’s brave new UK a white, young working class mother being jailed for throwing water at cops is somehow appropriate, it appears.
Starmer’s Operation Early Dawn means defendants waiting for a court appearance could be held in police cells for longer until prison space is available in the event they are remanded in custody. It can mean court dates are delayed or adjourned at short notice.
The prosecutors are “fast-tracking” cases of people accused of involvement in the riots and already more than 130 have been sentenced. Most of these people are working class under-employed or unemployed Brits who can’t afford lawyers to fight their cases, which leaves them vulnerable to abuses of justice by judges obedient to messaging from the Starmer regime.
Sky News UK quoted the national chairman of the Prison Officers Association Mark Fairhurst as saying that prisons had a major influx of 397 new receptions with only 340 spaces left in the “adult closed male estate” and offenders from the North East and North West faced being “carted 100, 200 miles away from home” to serve their sentence.
The Ministry of Justice, putting aside any pretense of impartiality, released a statement says prisons in the north of England had seen hundreds of people enter the prison estate in recent weeks after “the government took decisive action to tackle violent thuggery on our streets”.
Of course the same ministry did not dare to make such suggestions over rioting by largely immigrant Britons over six days in August 2011. During those riots in London and eight other UK cities, so many fires were set that police had to prioritise saving lives and let property burn. Five people were killed.
As with 2024, police blamed social media for helping spread the rioting, which began after some 300 people turned up at a police station seeking answers over the police shooting of 29-year-old Mark Duggan during an intelligence-led, targeted vehicle stop procedure on the Ferry Lane bridge next to Tottenham Hale station.
The Law Society warned at the time that cases could be delayed and solicitors were unlikely to know if their clients’ cases would definitely be heard until they arrived at court.