Engineer who told followers ‘burn any hotels’ in social media post after Southport killings is jailed

By Editor Mark Duell

Engineer who told followers 'burn any hotels' in social media post after Southport killings is jailed

An engineer who posted ‘burn any hotels with those scruffy b*****ds in it’ on social media during last summer’s riots has been jailed for 15 months.

Joseph Haythorne, 26, posted the comment on X at lunchtime on August 4 last year, just as violence erupted outside a hotel housing asylum seekers near Rotherham.

More than 60 officers were injured in the violence in the South Yorkshire town that afternoon as hundreds of people bombarded police and the hotel with missiles.

At one point rioters set fire to a bin against a fire door of the Holiday Inn Express hotel, which had 240 asylum seekers inside as well as more than 20 staff.

Sheffield Crown Court heard yesterday that Haythorne’s post from an anonymised account was viewed by 1,100 people in 17 minutes before he deleted it.

The message by Haythorne, from Ashford in Surrey, had also included a link to a now-deleted post by activist Tommy Robinson, real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon.

The defendant’s full post read: ‘Go on Rotherham. Burn any hotels with them scruffy b*****ds in it.’

It came amid a wave of violent disorder in the UK after the Southport stabbings which saw three girls murdered at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in July 2024.

Prosecutors said Haythorne’s case had some similarities with that of Lucy Connolly, who was jailed last October for 31 months after she posted on X: ‘Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f****** hotels full of the b******* for all I care… if that makes me racist so be it.’

Connolly, the wife of a former Conservative councillor, is now partway through her sentence and had a bid to reduce it dismissed at the Court of Appeal in May.

Speaking about Haythorne following his sentencing, Connolly’s husband Ray Connolly told The Telegraph: ‘He can thank his lucky stars his partner isn’t a Tory councillor.’

Shadow home secretary Chris Philp added: ‘There are a lot of inconsistencies in sentencing. A rapist recently received only 28 months and the Attorney General, Lord Hermer, refused to allow that sentence to be reviewed.

‘It cannot be right that Lucy Connolly got a longer sentence for a tweet than someone convicted of rape.’

And Lord Young, general secretary of the Free Speech Union, told the newspaper: ‘No one should be sent to prison for a tweet. This is not a good use of valuable prison spaces that should be kept for thieves, muggers, stabbers and drug dealers.’

In court yesterday, Bianca Brasoveanu, defending Haythorne, said he ‘made a wrongful connection between the Southport events and immigration in general’ after reading a ‘poisonous’ post online.

She told the court the case was different to that of Connolly, whose post was live for hours and an investigation into her social media ‘revealed other posts including further racist remarks’.

Ms Brasoveanu said: ‘None of this was present within Mr Haythorne’s social media. The defendant is more interested in football than anything else.’

She added that Haythorne ‘displayed a very different way of behaviour’ by deleting the post after 17 minutes and handing himself in at a police station.

The barrister said the defendant has problems around depression which would make him vulnerable in prison as his symptoms could worsen.

Judge Jeremy Richardson KC called the defendant’s post ‘vile’.

The judge said Haythorne had been distressed by comments online about the ‘dreadful events in Southport’, adding that there had been ‘an awful lot of malicious and malignant nonsense on the internet’.

He reduced the sentence after considering the defendant’s clinical depression, his guilty plea at the earliest opportunity and personal mitigation.

But Judge Richardson was sure that immediate custody was necessary due to the seriousness of the offence and he jailed Haythorne for 15 months.

He said: ‘It gives me no pleasure whatsoever in sending someone like you to prison because you have many positive attributes in life.

‘But unfortunately, in that whole episode in August of last year, whilst there were some very bad people conducting themselves very badly, there were also a number of otherwise perfectly good people who did something very bad, and you are in that category.’

Earlier yesterday, before adjourning to consider his sentence, the judge said Haythorne ‘took leave of his senses’ after being ‘inflamed by malignant comments on social media’ and made the post ‘just as the incident at Rotherham was taking off in a very unpleasant fashion’.

He read the defendant’s post about burning hotels and told him: ‘Within one and a half to two hours, that is exactly what happened.’

Haythorne had been due to be sentenced last week but his original conviction was quashed when it emerged that the offence he was charged with – publishing material intended to stir up racial hatred – requires permission from the Attorney General before charges can be brought, and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) had not sought permission due to an ‘oversight’.

His case was sent back to magistrates’ court, where he pleaded guilty to the charge for a second time.

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