
Andrew Tate's UK civil trial over abuse, coercive control allegations moved to 2026
LONDON, June 25 (Reuters) - Andrew Tate, an internet personality and self-described misogynist, faces a trial in Britain next year in four women's civil lawsuits for alleged physical and sexual abuse, after the case was brought forward on Wednesday.
The four claimants, who have been granted anonymity, allege Tate subjected them to physical or sexual violence between 2013 and 2015. Two say they were in an intimate relationship with Tate, while two worked for his online webcam business.
The women's lawyers say in court filings that one woman was threatened with a gun as Tate said "you're going to do as I say or there'll be hell to pay", while another alleges Tate strangled her until she was unconscious during sex.
Tate, 38, denies the allegations and his lawyers say in his written defence that the claims are false and that all sexual activity was consensual.
During a preliminary hearing at London's High Court on Wednesday, the trial was brought forward to June 2026, having previously been due to start in early 2027.
"It's not in anyone's interest that this case goes into the long grass of 2027," judge Christina Lambert said.
The claimants' lawyer Anne Studd said that, in addition to the four women, there would be a further six to eight witnesses.
The four British claimants welcomed the decision.
"We've already spent years waiting for justice, and so it's of some comfort to hear that Andrew Tate will face these allegations in a court earlier than the original plan of 2027," they said.
Tate did not attend Wednesday's brief hearing and was not required to do so. His lawyers previously said he intends to give evidence in his defence at the trial.
Tate and his brother Tristan are under criminal investigation in Romania and face a criminal case in Britain. Their lawyers said last month the pair will return to face those charges once proceedings in Romania conclude.

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Times
27 minutes ago
- Times
How Hainault swordsman Marcus Monzo slipped into drugs and delusion
Three friends at a martial arts gym in east London watched grainy video of a bearded man roaming a residential street armed with a samurai sword, late on April 30 last year. Screams of 'he's got a massive knife' could be heard as residents in Laing Close, Hainault, cowered at the horrific 20-minute rampage that unfolded on their doorstep at 7am. The knifeman had driven his van into Donato Iwule, a security guard, and stabbed him, before he ambushed Daniel Anjorin, 14, whose life was 'snuffed out in an instant'. The schoolboy, described as a 'beloved son and a precious brother', died in hospital from his wounds. Dressed in a yellow Quiksilver hoodie, the attacker broke into a house and slashed a father in front of his estranged wife and their daughter. Later he seriously injured two Metropolitan Police officers when they tried to apprehend him. Emma* said: 'I saw the video on social media and said, 'Oh my God, this is horrible.' Then we heard who it was when he was charged. We looked at the video again. We realised we knew this person but hadn't recognised him — he was skinny and gaunt. He didn't look like that when he trained here.' Marcus Arduini Monzo faces a life sentence after being convicted of the cannabis-induced psychotic rampage following a trial at the Old Bailey in London. On Wednesday Monzo, 37, of West Beckton in east London, was found guilty of murder, three counts of attempted murder, and two charges of wounding with intent, aggravated burglary and having an article with a blade or point, namely a kitchen knife. Before his trial he admitted two counts of having an offensive weapon, namely a katana and a tanto, both types of Japanese sword. Those who knew Monzo, who was born in Brazil, had not seen the 'easygoing boy' since he left for the UK more than a decade ago. They were unable to comprehend Monzo's appalling crimes carried out at daybreak 6,000 miles away. Leandro Leite, a baker in Astorga, a rural town of 26,000 people in southern Brazil, said: 'We never thought that people would come to know us like this.' Monzo spent his early years with his parents and older brother in the countryside outside Astorga, in a small community known as Paranaguá. Monzo's parents worked as farmers until the late 1990s when large agricultural corporations moved into the area and took over their business. Two of his school friends recalled their close bond with Monzo during their teenage years. The three saw each other almost every day after school and played video games at an internet café that had recently opened in the town. Later they trained together at a local gym. Both men said they never saw Monzo behave violently. In Paranaguá, The Times spoke to Marisa de Oliveira, who said she went to primary school with the killer. They also attended a Catholic catechism course at a small church that still stands in the community. She said: 'I have had a hard time believing that it was the Marcus we knew. He was always an easygoing boy, he wasn't quarrelsome. I feel sorry for the boy's mother. As a mother too, I can only imagine the pain of losing a child.' Monzo experienced 'bullying and violence' during his teenage years and an 'obsession' with his ears led to surgery. He spoke of having issues with alcohol too. Monzo studied for a degree in business administration and ran an online clothing business with his brother for six years. His father had left for the US to find work and the family later joined him but Monzo struggled to gain a green card and was unable to work. He applied for a Spanish passport through his mother's heritage and moved to London in 2013, aged 25. Monzo worked in pubs and began smoking cannabis as well as taking an LSD-like hallucinogenic and magic mushrooms with friends. 'The first time I took it I had a very special experience,' he said. The Spanish-Brazilian citizen claimed to have irregularly smoked the class B drug with friends for two years until he realised 'it was not serving me well', when he consumed it alone. 'I became lazy and unproductive. I wasn't the hardworking person I was before,' he added. He took up Brazilian jiu-jitsu and joined a martial arts gym in east London where patrons described Monzo as a polite, sociable, 'happy-go-lucky guy' who was 'shredded' and took care of himself. Danny* said: 'We met him when he joined in around 2013. He took part in competitions and he was very competitive. The gym is like a big community and people who train as friends will often socialise. There was never any heat, he never lost his temper.' Steven* added: 'He was very calm and a good athlete — very capable, very strong.' After a competition injury in 2016, Monzo turned to yoga and alternative medicine to avoid surgery. He developed an intense interest in spirituality. He characterised this as 'exploring the subtle aspects of life — the magical, miraculous and supernatural'. Drugs undoubtedly played a role. He started following Sadhguru, the spiritual guru who is popular on YouTube, in 2017 and spent a year at an ashram retreat in India. Monzo said he was taught at a retreat to detach from family and friends. During a weekend trip, he took ayahuasca — a hallucinogenic brew traditionally used in South America. He returned to the UK 'looking skinnier', before travelling to a remote part of Brazil to consume more ayahuasca, he said. Monzo took ayahuasca twice in the UK, describing it as having stronger effects during 'ceremonies'. He later travelled back to Brazil and India, and attended 'breatharian' festivals in Italy and Denmark, which promote living without food, the jury was told. On his return to the UK in 2021, Monzo argued with family members over his personal hygiene, later admitting that his behaviour at this time was 'a little extreme'. 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Emma said: 'When he came back around he was a bit weird, he was not the same person. They noticed he didn't have a smartphone and instead used a 'brick' phone. Monzo trained as a boxer for a few months before he stopped attending the gym in November 2023, five months before he carried out his crimes. By last year, Monzo's mental health was declining and he began smoking more cannabis, an act of self-medication to treat his anxiety, while dealing with paranoia and intrusive thoughts. When news of Monzo's arrest reached his home town, one school friend, who asked to remain anonymous, said he last saw Monzo in 2016 and they travelled to the coast of southern Brazil. 'He told me he missed his friends but his life was settled in the UK,' the man said. 'After that, I had three or four conversations with him and our lives took different paths. 'We knew that he started travelling and perhaps that was a problem … He didn't find himself.' *Names have been changed


The Independent
31 minutes ago
- The Independent
Sword murderer had social media peppered with far-right extremism and conspiracy theories
Marcus Arduini Monzo, the man responsible for a horror sword attack that killed 14-year-old Daniel Anjorin last year, has been found guilty. The 37-year-old was convicted on Wednesday of carrying out a marauding attack, which included the murder of the teenager just yards from his home in north London on April 30 last year. Monzo's online profile revealed a disturbing fascination with violence, conspiracy theories, Incel ideology, and far-right extremism. His interests also extended to controversial figures such as Andrew Tate. He was also noted to hold a blue belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. It can now be reported that the dual Spanish-Brazilian national, who was living in Newham, east London, had liked posts on X which praised Nazi leader Adolf Hitler. Over a year, Monzo's X account also liked references to various antisemitic conspiracy theories and misogynistic Incel material. At his Old Bailey trial, Monzo had told jurors he believed the world was flat and that the 9/11 terrorist attack in New York was 'probably' a conspiracy theory. This flat earth belief was also reflected in various montages and memes on X. One post stated: 'How did I become a flat earther? I tried debunking it..' Monzo responded to a news report on the flat earther epidemic by claiming on social media that this was a positive as it would spark curiosity over the issue. In a reference to another conspiracy, Monzo posted: 'I live in London. Here everybody will agree that the city is GREY. And the reason is BECAUSE they spray the sky ALL DAY, EVERY DAY'. The chemtrail conspiracy theory asserts that governments or other malicious actors are engaged in a secret programme to disseminate toxic chemicals into the atmosphere. Over the period of a year, Monzo's X account also reflected an interest in an Indian yogi guru and soil improvement campaigns as well as public figures such as Elon Musk, David Icke and Andrew Tate. Among the various conspiracy theories Monzo liked or interacted with were claims of CIA brainwashing, that the Titanic disaster was no accident, and the supposed existence of giants and 'ancient AI'. He also shared anti-vaccination misinformation including a video claiming close proximity to those who received the Covid-19 jab would result in illness. Monzo's social media accounts also underlined his fascination with traditional Japanese samurai and katana swords. On TikTok, his FreeKingMark profile described him as a mystic, musician, martial artist, jedi and a ninja. On Pinterest, the FreeKingMark account had saved dozens of images featuring figures with samurai swords and other weapons. Less than two weeks before the attack, Monzo uploaded a video of himself to an Instagram account called 'FreeKingMark' repeatedly punching a bag in the gym. Another photo, posted on January 25 last year, showed him smiling with two thumbs up and a number of medals from a Brazilian jiu-jitsu competition around his neck. Monzo's boxing coach, who asked not to be named, told the PA news agency that he was a recluse who struggled to fit in. On the former delivery driver, he said: 'He was a bit different, but he was a nice guy. As far as I know, he did not have any friends.'


Glasgow Times
34 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Trial of High Court claims against Andrew Tate brought forward to next summer
Four women are suing the former professional kickboxer over allegations of sexual violence, including that he grabbed one by the throat on several occasions in 2015, assaulted her with a belt and pointed a gun at her face. Tate's barristers told an earlier court hearing that there was 'total denial of wrongdoing'. In written submissions for a hearing on Wednesday, barristers for the women said that following a preliminary hearing in April this year, a 16-day trial had been listed to start on February 22 2027. But Mrs Justice Lambert told the court in London that she was 'very keen to get on' with the case and that it should be listed sooner, fixing the trial to start on June 22 2026. The trial could last up to five weeks, with a further preliminary hearing expected to take place at a later date. She said: 'We just need to make this happen, really. 'It is not in anyone's interests that this case goes into the long grass of 2027.' Following the short hearing, the four claimants said: 'We welcome the judge's decision to bring our case forward. 'We've already spent years waiting for justice, and so it's of some comfort to hear that Andrew Tate will face these allegations in a court earlier than the original plan of 2027.' Andrew Tate is being sued over allegations of sexual violence (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File) The hearing in April was told that the case is believed to be a legal first as it will consider whether allegations of coercive control, in a civil context, could amount to intentional infliction of harm. Judge Richard Armstrong said that the claimants were 'seeking damages likely to reach six figures'. The women are bringing a civil case against Tate at the High Court after the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to prosecute in 2019. Three of the British accusers were the subject of an investigation by Hertfordshire Constabulary, which was closed in 2019. In court documents, one woman suing Tate claimed he 'would strangle her or grab her by her throat if she spoke back to him or said anything that he did not like… until she told him that she loved him or apologised for whatever he demanded at the time'. She said he, and his brother Tristan Tate, 'played good cop and bad cop to manipulate her', and that Tate allegedly put her in a headlock or whipped her with a belt if she did not get out of bed and do work for his webcam business. One woman said Tate and his brother Tristan 'played good cop and bad cop to manipulate her' (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda, File) The documents also allege Tate 'had weapons, including firearms, which were often pointed at her' and that he had 'indicated to her that he would like to kill someone if he could'. Tate said that her account was 'fabrication' and a 'pack of lies', and has previously described the allegations as 'unproven and untested'. In a statement, a spokesperson for Tate previously said: 'He denies ever threatening anyone with a firearm, engaging in non-consensual acts or subjecting any individual to physical or psychological harm. 'These are civil claims, brought years after the alleged events and following a CPS decision not to pursue criminal charges. 'It is deeply troubling that such graphic and one-sided accounts are being publicised before any judicial assessment has taken place.' The statement added: 'Mr Tate will defend himself vigorously and remains confident the truth will prevail.'