Belfast loyalist Winston Irvine's sentence referred to Court of Appeal
Irvine was sentenced to two-and-a-half years, with half to be served in jail, at Belfast Crown Court last month following an incident where firearms and ammunition were found in the boot of his car.
The 49-year-old avoided a statutory five-year sentence on several of the charges he faced after Judge Gordon Kerr KC ruled that there were 'exceptional circumstances' in his case, namely Irvine's 'work for peace and his charity work in the community'.
However, there was criticism by several political figures, including First Minister Michelle O'Neill, that the sentence had been too lenient.
The Director of Public Prosecutions Stephen Herron is to refer the sentence imposed on Winston Irvine (49) last month in respect of a number of firearms and ammunition offences to the Court of Appeal.
Please visit our website for the full statementhttps://t.co/ATVW3NFwJG pic.twitter.com/z5R4IpYdyk
— Public Prosecution Service (@thePPSNI) June 13, 2025
On Friday it was announced that Northern Ireland's Director of Public Prosecutions Stephen Herron was referring the sentence to the Court of Appeal.
The Public Prosecution Service (PPS) confirmed the referral has been lodged with the Court of Appeal.
'While sentencing is a matter for the independent judiciary, the Director of Public Prosecutions does have the power to refer particular sentences to the Court of Appeal on the grounds that they may be unduly lenient,' a PPS spokesperson said.
'An unduly lenient sentence is one that falls outside the range of sentences that a judge, taking into consideration all relevant factors and having regard to sentencing guidance, could reasonably impose. The sentence must not just be lenient but unduly lenient.
'After careful consideration of the sentence handed down in the case of Winston Irvine, including with the benefit of advices from independent Senior Counsel, we have determined that there is a sufficient legal basis to refer the sentence to the Court of Appeal.'
They said consideration was also given to the sentence handed down to Irvine's co-accused Adam Robinson Workman, 54, who was sentenced to five years imprisonment.
But they said following careful consideration, it was determined that there was no legal basis on which to refer Workman's sentence to the Court of Appeal as potentially unduly lenient.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Man who attacked Co-op staff dies after being restrained by vigilante customer
A man has died after he was restrained by a vigilante Co-op customer. The man, 52, was reported to police after staff at the Co-op store in Fore Street, Torpoint, Cornwall, were attacked at 4.45pm on Wednesday Aug 6. He was restrained by a male customer but became unresponsive a short while later. The man was taken to hospital in a critical condition but died in hospital on Saturday, Devon and Cornwall Police confirmed. A man in his 40s, from Millbrook, was arrested on suspicion of assault and has been bailed until Nov 1, while further enquiries are carried out into the incident. Devon and Cornwall Police are appealing for more information from anyone who saw what happened. A spokesman for the force said: 'A 52-year-old man has died in hospital following an incident in Torpoint on Wednesday 6 August. Police were called at 4.45pm following reports of a disturbance at Co-op Food in Fore Street. 'During the incident the man was restrained by another customer but became unresponsive a short time later. The man, from Torpoint, was treated by paramedics and taken to Derriford Hospital. 'Police are continuing their enquiries into the circumstances surrounding the incident. Anyone who witnessed the incident or has information is asked to contact police online or by telephone on 101, quoting log number 696 of 06/08/25.'
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sunderland riot burglar spared jail after seeking help to counter his 'harmful' far-right thinking
A dad who took part in a burglary during a riot which left a vape store £83,000 out of pocket has been spared prison after seeking help to counter his 'harmful' far-right thinking. Wayne Robinson admitted he was "engaging with far-right ideology" at the time of the mass disorder which brought shame on Sunderland last August. Robinson, described in court as vulnerable, carried as many vapes as he could carry from a city centre store which was targeted by a number of people. He also took part in the wider violent disorder which erupted in the city, Newcastle Crown Court heard. A judge said that, unlike many involved that day who claimed they just happened to be present, Robinson, 34 of The Avenue, Durham, has admitted he was "curious" about far-right ideology. However he has since sought help to address those thoughts, including by engaging voluntarily with a counter-terrorism programme. READ MORE: Northumberland A1 crash LIVE: Updates as two-vehicle collision closes road in both directions READ MORE: Warning issued after more 'stupid' drivers trapped on Holy Island Causeway The court heard it was around 4pm on August 2 last year that a planned protest took place in Sunderland city centre but it quickly turned into widespread violent disorder involving hundreds of people. Omar Ahmad, prosecuting, said: "It was not safe for ordinary members of the public to be in the city centre at that time." Robinson's involvement in what happened was caught on CCTV. He was one of a number of people who broke into a vape store on Market Square, Sunderland. The owner accessed CCTV that night and Mr Ahmad said: "He could see multiple people kicking the glass at the front of the premises. He contacted the police, who said they would be there as soon as possible. "He then saw people entering the premises through the broken glass and stealing items from the display and stock room. The offenders had smashed glass in the cabinets, damaging counter tops." Robinson stole as many boxes as he could from the shop before leaving. The court heard the total cost to the company, in terms of lost stock, repairs, replacements and extra security, was £83,717. Other footage showed Robinson gesturing to police, kicking windows, carrying a flag with the words "Lest we forget" on it near a mosque and he was also seen filming the protest while others threw items at the police, including beer kegs, chairs and wheelie bins. Robinson, a dad-of-two who has 24 previous convictions, pleaded guilty to violent disorder and burglary. He was sentenced to 22 months suspended for two years, with 200 hours of unpaid work and a six-month drug rehabilitation requirement. Recorder Tom Moran said those involved in the disorder had "brought shame on the city of Sunderland for no justifiable reason at all". He added that the actions of each of those involved, however small individually, encouraged others to behaviour in a similar way and had to be viewed as part of the overall picture. He said Robinson's behaviour was directed at property rather than the police or other people and said while he kicked windows, it wasn't him who broke them. He added: "You have expressed remorse and you were unusually honest in indicating you were curious about extreme ideology, rather than claiming, as so many did, that you were just there and got caught up in what happened. "You present as a vulnerable man with a mild learning difficult who can be easily influenced and exploited by others." Recorder Moran said while almost every case of someone being involved in such offences would result in immediate custody, there was "exceptional mitigation" in Robinson's case which allowed him to suspend the sentence. Sophie Allinson-Howells, defending, said: "The defendant has undertaken meaningful work to challenge the attitude he had at the time. Most people in this court try to distance themselves from any far-right ideology and say they were just there and got caught up in it. "To his credit, he told the author of the pre-sentence report that he had previously engaged with far-right ideology. Well before, this, he had been seeking help and explaining to primary care teams that he was struggling with this narrative and had sought help from the organisations he is now engaging with, but received very little help. "He has been working with organisations which counter far-right ideology, a counter-terrorism team and the Prevent organisation, to undo the ideas he had formed in recent years. "He has shown insight and has been engaging, not only with the counter-terrorism organisations but the mental health services. He has done everything he could to try to unpick these harmful thoughts he had formed. "He was not present at recent protests. A year ago, he would have been present. "He is rightly described as vulnerable. He has a learning disability, he has traits of an emotionally unstable personality disorder and he has been sectioned twice within the last decade or so. He has also struggled with substance misuse.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
A Right-Wing Influencer Tried to Be a Tradwife. It Almost Broke Her.
Lauren Southern, one of the most well-known right-wing influencers during Donald Trump's first term, first went viral with a 2015 video titled 'Why I Am Not a Feminist.' Then 19, beautiful and blond, Southern argued that women are advantaged in many areas of life, including child custody disputes and escaping abusive relationships. 'Feminists are unintentionally creating a world of reverse sexism that I don't want to be a part of,' she said. But being an antifeminist, it turns out, is no shield against abusive male power. Southern's new self-published memoir, 'This Is Not Real Life,' is the story of conservative ideology colliding with reality. It's made headlines for her claim that Andrew Tate, an unrepentant online misogynist accused of human trafficking, sexually assaulted her in Romania in 2018. (Tate has denied this.) The book is particularly revealing, though, for its depiction of Southern's painful attempts to contort herself into an archetypical tradwife, an effort that left her almost suicidal. Her story should be a cautionary tale for the young women who aspire to the domestic life she once evangelized for. Despite the presence of a few high-profile women in Trump's administration, the right is increasingly trying to drive women out of public life. Some of this push comes from the unabashed patriarchs atop the Republican Party; last week, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reposted a video in which leaders of his Christian denomination said that women shouldn't be allowed to vote. ('All of Christ for All of Life,' wrote Hegseth.) But there are also female influencers who present housewifery as the ultimate in wellness, an escape from the soulless grind of the workplace. 'Less Prozac, more protein,' the podcast host Alex Clark told thousands of listeners at a conservative women's conference in June. 'Less burnout, more babies, less feminism, more femininity.' (Clark is unmarried and has no children.) This Instagram-inflected traditionalism is taking hold at a time when the workplace is becoming even less friendly to women. As The Washington Post reported on Monday, large numbers of mothers have left the work force this year. Many have been driven out by return-to-office mandates and a backlash against diversity policies that's led to hostile working environments. But some, according to The Post, 'say they are giving up jobs happily, in line with MAGA culture and the rise of the 'traditional wife.'' Southern had more reason than most to want to retreat into the cult of domesticity. As she recounts in her memoir, her antifeminist video helped propel her to international notoriety, and soon she was traveling the world as an avatar of irreverent online reaction. She gave out fliers saying, 'Allah is a Gay God' in a Muslim neighborhood in England, popularized the idea that there's a white genocide in South Africa and interviewed the reactionary philosopher Alexander Dugin on a trip to Moscow seemingly arranged by shadowy Russian interests. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.