
‘Well done to Starmer for making it difficult for girl of 12', blasts Lucy Connolly's husband after riot-tweet mum freed
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RIOT-tweet mum Lucy Connolly was freed from jail to rejoin her husband and 12-year-old daughter — after more than a year as a victim of 'two-tier justice'.
Husband Ray, a Tory on Northampton Town Council said she had coped 'relatively well' with jail, adding: 'The only person who hasn't is our daughter.'
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Lucy Connolly with husband Ray, who says Starmer deserves a 'pat on the back' for 'making it so difficult for a girl of 12'
Credit: SWNS
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Lucy Connolly was caged for stirring up racial hatred after the Southport killings
Credit: PA
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Lucy left HMP Peterborough in a taxi at 10am
Credit: picture Stone Ltd
'It will be good to have her home. We are thankful for the support.
'Our focus will be to try to sort out our lives and for my wife to reconnect with our daughter.'
Lucy, 42, caged for stirring up racial hatred after the Southport killings, left HMP Peterborough in a taxi at 10am.
Her punishment sparked a major debate, with PM Sir Keir Starmer accused of 'two-tier justice'.
Thanked public for support
Tory councillor Ray added sarcastically: 'Well done to Starmer for making it so difficult for a girl of 12. Let's all give him a pat on the back.'
He said the family were delighted Lucy was coming home after more than a year and thanked the public for their support.
Ex-childminder Lucy wore pink for her low-key departure from HMP Peterborough — crouching down in a white Skoda estate at 10am.
She did not immediately return to the family's £400,000 semi in Northampton and is understood to be staying away from her home.
In all she spent over a year behind bars — two months held on remand before she was sentenced at Birmingham crown court.
She was freed at the automatic release point, after serving 40 per cent of her term in prison.
Lucy Connolly is freed after jail term for racist tweet over Southport attack
She will serve the remainder on licence under supervision.
Reform deputy leader Richard Tice MP, who visited her in jail, told The Sun: 'I'm delighted that Lucy is finally out of prison.
'She should never have been inside in the first place.
'I understand she is doing OK and am sure it was a very emotional reunion for her.
'The family will now need some time and space to readjust and welcome Lucy home.
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Lucy was arrested on August 6 and later pleased guilty to stirring up racial hatred
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Her husband Ray, a Tory on Northampton Town Council, said she had coped 'relatively well' with jail
Credit: PA
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PM Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of 'two-tier justice'
Credit: AFP
'We all need to keep the pressure on the Government and Keir Starmer as to why she was prosecuted in the first place.
'Given that, in 2013, while Director of Public Prosecutions he introduced guidelines that would have kept Lucy out of jail he is the biggest hypocrite in the country.
'This case just confirms that we have two-tier justice.'
Lucy tweeted on July 29, 2024, hours after Axel Rudakubana killed Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Da Silva Aguiar, nine, at a dance class.
Lucy was charged with stirring up racial hatred — an offence that doesn't even require intent to incite violence.
Toy leader Kemi Badenoch
Her post called for 'mass deportation now' and urged followers on X to 'set fire' to migrant hotels. It was viewed 310,000 times in the three hours before she deleted it.
Lucy was arrested on August 6 and later pleaded guilty to stirring up racial hatred.
During her appeal against her sentence in May, the Court of Appeal heard the news of the Southport murders had sparked a resurgence of the anxiety caused by her son Harry's death at the age of 19 months, 14 years earlier.
When Sir Keir was DPP in 2013, he introduced guidance saying prosecutors should consider being lenient to suspects who 'swiftly' deleted tweets or showed remorse.
Speaking after Lucy's release, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said 'Her punishment was harsher than sentences handed down for bricks thrown at police or actual rioting.
'After Southport, Keir Starmer branded all protesters 'far-right' and called for fast-track prosecutions.
"Days later, Lucy was charged with stirring up racial hatred — an offence that doesn't even require intent to incite violence.
"Why exactly did the Attorney General think that was in the public interest? Meanwhile, former Labour councillor Ricky Jones called for protestors to have their throats slit.
'Law itself is broken'
'Charged with encouraging violent disorder, he pleaded not guilty and was acquitted by a jury who saw his words as a disgusting remark made in the heat of the moment, not a call to action.
'Juries are a cornerstone of justice, but we shouldn't have to rely on them to protect basic freedoms.
'Protecting people from words should not be given greater weight in law than public safety.
'If the law does this, then the law itself is broken and it's time Parliament looked again at the Public Order Act.'
Sir Keir defended Lucy's sentence in May saying: 'I am strongly in favour of free speech.
'But I am equally against incitement to violence against others. I will always support the action taken by our police and courts to keep our streets and people safe.'
Lucy was one of around a dozen lags freed from 1,200-inmate all-female HMP Peterborough yesterday.
She had been put on a 'basic regime' after refusing to return to her cell. It meant she had £5.50 a week to spend in the canteen.
Mr Tice claimed she was bruised after being manhandled by guards.
Yesterday ex-prison governor Ian Acheson suggested Lucy could sue, which would mean jail logs would be disclosable to her lawyers.
He added: 'I've no idea whether this will happen, but features of her treatment alleged in media were so perverse it's a real possibility. Interesting times ahead.'
LOCKED UP FOR ONE TWEET IS SCANDAL
By Lord Toby Young, from The Free Speech Union
I was glad to see Lucy Connolly finally walk free today, but the fact that she has spent more than a year in prison for a single tweet -- quickly deleted and apologised for -- is a national scandal, particularly when Labour MPs, councillors and anti-racism campaigners who have said and done much worse have avoided jail. The same latitude they enjoyed should have been granted to Lucy.
Sir Keir Starmer said in May that Lucy's sentence was justified because her tweet was 'incitement to violence against other people'. But was it?
The test we employ when deciding whether to prosecute someone for supposedly inciting violence should be the same as it is in the United States, namely, was it intended to cause violence and was it likely to?
I don't think Lucy's tweet met either limb of that test (and for speech not to be protected by the First Amendment in America it has to meet both).
Had she urged her followers to burn down a particular asylum hotel, maybe it would have failed those tests.
But she did not and she added the words 'for all I care', suggesting she was indifferent as to whether asylum hotels in general were burnt down and not inciting people to set fire to them.
Had she pleaded not guilty, she might well have been acquitted by a jury, just as the ex-Royal Marine Jamie Michael was after being charged with the same offence.
The Free Speech Union, the organisation I run, paid for Jamie's defence and we offered to pay for Lucy's.
But unlike Ricky Jones, the Labour councillor who urged people to cut the throats of anti-immigration protestors, she was not granted bail and worried that if she pleaded not guilty she would have to spend longer in prison awaiting trial than if she pleaded guilty.
As it turned out, she was wrong about that, but then she was not expecting to be sentenced to more than two-and-half years, which is longer than some members of grooming gangs have received after pleading guilty to child rape.
What Lucy has suffered at the hands of the British state is a clear case of injustice. She has become Exhibit A for those of us raising the alarm about the assault on free speech in Starmer's Britain.
And if it's any consolation to her, that alarm is now being heard across the world, from the White House to Quinta de Olivos in Argentina.
Let's hope the people of Britain wake up to this attack on their right to freedom of expression before they lose it entirely.
Lord Young is the founder and director of the Free Speech Union.

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The Independent
29 minutes ago
- The Independent
Lucy Connolly to speak out for first time since being released from prison
Lucy Connolly, who was jailed for stirring up racial hatred against asylum seekers online on the day of the Southport murders, is expected to speak out on Friday for the first time since being released from prison. The 42-year-old, wife of Conservative councillor Raymond Connolly, left HMP Peterborough on Thursday morning and it is understood she will be doing limited media interviews a day after walking free. She spent time with her husband, daughter and parents on the day of her release and was pictured walking her dogs in the evening, the Daily Mail reported. Ms Connolly was handed a 31-month sentence after she posted on X: 'Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f****** hotels full of the bastards for all I care … if that makes me racist so be it.' She pleaded guilty to inciting racial hatred by publishing and distributing 'threatening or abusive' written material on X and was jailed at Birmingham Crown Court in October last year. The former childminder, from Northampton, was ordered to serve 40% of her sentence in prison before being released on licence. It is understood that Ms Connolly was a passenger in a white taxi which left HMP Peterborough via the vehicle airlock, a set of two gates exiting the prison, shortly after 10am on Thursday. Her case has sparked debate, with some criticising her sentence as excessive. Reacting to her release, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said Connolly's sentence was 'harsher than the sentences handed down for bricks thrown at police or actual rioting'. In a post on X, Ms Badenoch compared Ms Connolly's case with that of Ricky Jones, a suspended Labour councillor who was found not guilty of encouraging violent disorder at an anti-racism rally in the wake of the Southport murders. Writing on X, Mrs Badenoch said: 'Juries are a cornerstone of justice, but we shouldn't have to rely on them to protect basic freedoms. 'Protecting people from words should not be given greater weight in law than public safety. If the law does this, then the law itself is broken – and it's time Parliament looked again at the Public Order Act.' Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described Ms Connolly's case as a 'symbol of Keir Starmer's authoritarian, broken, two-tier Britain'. A bid to challenge her sentence at the Court of Appeal was dismissed in May, which was described by Mr Connolly as 'shocking and unfair'. The Northampton town councillor, and former West Northamptonshire district councillor, said his wife had 'paid a very high price for making a mistake'. But Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer defended it earlier this year. He was asked in May about Ms Connolly's case after her Court of Appeal application against her jail term was dismissed. Asked during Prime Minister's Questions whether her imprisonment was an 'efficient or fair use' of prison, Sir Keir said: 'Sentencing is a matter for our courts and I celebrate the fact that we have independent courts in this country. 'I am strongly in favour of free speech, we've had free speech in this country for a very long time and we protect it fiercely. 'But I am equally against incitement to violence against other people. I will always support the action taken by our police and courts to keep our streets and people safe.' Ms Connolly was arrested on August 6, by which point she had deleted her social media account, but other messages which included further racist remarks were uncovered by officers who seized her phone. The post was viewed 310,000 times in three and a half hours before she deleted it.


Daily Mirror
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Lucy Connolly's husband breaks silence after mum whose tweet sparked violence freed
Lucy Connolly served 40 per cent of her sentence and was released from jail on Thursday after she posted a racist tweet during the height of the riots following the Southport murders Lucy Connolly's husband has broken his silence after the mum - who posted a racist tweet calling for hotels housing immigrants to be set on fire - was freed yesterday. Ray Connolly, a former Conservative councillor, spoke out following his wife's release from prison, adding she had coped "relatively well" with imprisonment. But he did admit: "The only person who hasn't is our daughter." Lucy, 42, was jailed after she shared a post online calling the hotels to be burned against the backdrop of the riots that gripped the country following the Southport murders. False rumours spread the killer was a recent immigrant when it was carried out by Axel Rudakubana, who was born in the UK to Rwandan parents. "It will be good to have her home. We are thankful for the support," Mr Connolly said, reports The Sun. "Our focus will be to try to sort out our lives and for my wife to reconnect with our daughter." Lucy left HMP Peterborough, a closed prison for women, in a taxi at about 10am on Thursday. He sarcastically commented on Prime Minister Keir Starmer, adding: "Well done to Starmer for making it so difficult for a girl of 12. Let's all give him a pat on the back." Former childminder Lucy was seen wearing pink when she left the prison and did not immediately return to the family's £400,000 home in Northampton. She had spent just under a year in prison following her sentence in October last year, although she was held for two months in remand before she appeared before Birmingham Crown Court last year. The mum was freed at the automatic release point after she served about 40 per cent of her jail time. She will now serve the rest of her sentence on licence and under supervision. Her tweet on July 2024, in the hours following the brutal killings, read: "Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f****** hotels full of the bastards for all I care… if that makes me racist so be it." The post was viewed more than 310,000 times in over three hours before it was deleted. Critics of her arrest claimed the punishment for the post was disproportionate while others have noted she pleaded guilty to inciting racial hatred. When quizzed about the sentencing during Prime Minister's Questions and if he viewed as an "efficient or fair use" of prison, Mr Starmer responded: "Sentencing is a matter for our courts. "I celebrate the fact that we have independent courts in this country. I am strongly in favour of free speech; we've had free speech in this country for a very long time, and we protect it fiercely. "But I am equally against incitement to violence against other people. I will always support the action taken by our police and courts to keep our streets and people safe."


Daily Mail
42 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Lucy Connolly's jail torment revealed: Truth about the middle-class mother's 377 days in prison - and how one officer said she was the most petrified inmate they'd ever seen
Not long ago, Lucy Connolly found herself being manhandled by up to six prison officers on the wing of HMP Peterborough that has been her home in recent months. Roughly handcuffed, she was bundled to another wing housing violent inmates and treated so forcefully that she was left in agony. Several days later, her wrists were still bruised. Lucy's ' crime '? On this occasion it was to object to being moved to a new cell in an area of the prison known as 'The Bronx', so called because it houses the most troublesome inmates – the violent, aggressive and difficult ones. Lucy Connolly, a childminder, had been none of these things during her months behind bars. Or indeed in civilian life. But then as we now know, this was not the first time that vastly disproportionate measures were alleged to have been taken against the 42-year-old wife and mother, who found herself placed at His Majesty's Pleasure last October. Faced with a 31-month stretch for posting a deeply unpleasant tweet, which she quickly regretted and deleted, Lucy's incarceration finally came to an end yesterday after nine agonising months behind bars. But as the MP and deputy Reform leader Richard Tice, who recently visited Connolly in prison, told the Daily Mail, she faces further challenging times ahead as she readjusts to life on the outside. 'I know that her main priority will be spending time with her family – that has kept her going. But at the same time her freedom will be a significant readjustment, not in the least because the things that are meant to help prisoners with that adjustment, such as day release, were denied to her,' he says. 'It is wonderful news that she is no longer behind bars, but the horrendous trauma that has been inflicted on the whole family will take time to heal.' Indeed. Legal bills and the loss of Lucy's childminding income have left her husband Ray, a former Conservative councillor, in thousands of pounds of debt, while their 13-year-old daughter Holly has struggled so much with her mother's absence and the dreadful, public circumstances behind it, that this previously bright and diligent schoolgirl has been suspended from school more than once in recent months. She has recently been living with her grandmother, Lucy's mum Heather, and other female relatives, as the family attempted to generate extra female support. 'I don't think you have to think about what happened to Lucy for very long to know that what happened has been incredibly hard for everyone,' says Richard Tice. Hard, and arguably deeply unfair. Today, so infamous is her name that the circumstances behind Lucy Connolly's incarceration barely need rehearsing. In the hours after killer Axel Rudakubana murdered three young girls and attempted to murder ten others at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on July 29, 2024 – sparking nationwide unrest – Lucy posted a tweet in which she called for mass deportation of migrants and wrote that people could 'set fire' to hotels housing the 'b***ards' for all she cared. She deleted the tweet within hours, but sensed something was afoot after receiving a torrent of messages referring to what she had written. Her husband later revealed that she had said the tweet had 'come back to haunt me'. Yet neither could surely imagine to what extent: arrested at home by uniformed police officers on August 6, she was charged with inciting racial hatred and was handed a 31-month sentence in October after pleading guilty to the offence at Birmingham Crown Court. What has been less well documented is how Lucy and her family have navigated her time behind bars. Although when the Mail visited the pleasant semi-detached family home in Northamptonshire yesterday, ahead of Lucy's release, Ray told us his wife had coped with imprisonment 'relatively well', in truth the whole family have endured months of emotional turmoil, particularly their daughter Holly. Twelve when her mum was arrested – she had to celebrate her 13th birthday without her – she has missed her terribly. 'She has found it very difficult not having her mum at home,' as Ray put it yesterday. Her mother, in turn, has had to navigate all manner of emotional onslaughts throughout the course of her imprisonment, not in the least the hammer blow of her appeal being overturned in May, along with countless rejected requests for day release – something to which she has been entitled since last November, but which have never been granted. But then as we shall see, Lucy's time in prison seems to have been characterised by obfuscation, double standards and, on occasion, downright lies. Initially sent on remand to HMP Peterborough, a fragile and frightened Lucy arrived in prison with a 'reputation' already formed, said her husband. A couple of the officers subsequently told her that they'd been warned by the authorities to 'watch out' for her because she could be violent. Lucy had to inform them she had never had a fight in her life. She had only just settled into Peterborough when she was transferred to Drake Hall in Staffordshire, increasing the time it took for visitors to make the trip from her home town in Northampton from two hours to three. Nonetheless, nearly every Sunday – family day in the prison calendar – Ray and Holly would dutifully make the trip, alongside other relatives and family friends. Notably, also among her visitors, the Mail understands, were the parents of children in Lucy's care – past and present – some of whom were from immigrant backgrounds and many of whom wrote character references to the sentencing judge pleading for leniency. Even with the unwavering love from her family however – and the groundswell of support from many members of the public – one can only imagine how desperately frightened this previously law-abiding citizen must have been in those early days, mingling with drug dealers, thieves and murderers. One anonymous officer at Peterborough reported that he had never seen anyone look so petrified on arrival. In fact, despite her own and her family's fears, Lucy settled into prison life reasonably well. After initial suspicion about her perceived 'poshness' and marriage to a Conservative councillor, Lucy became something of a mother figure to many of the damaged women she was housed alongside. Many would sit in her cell for hours, chatting and putting the world to rights, while Ray subsequently revealed that his wife had asked him to send extra money to give to some of the needier inmates, many of whom were homeless. 'Lucy got on great with some of the most difficult prisoners,' he told one journalist. 'There was this strong, scary, very attractive, powerful Jamaican girl and she was really kicking off with the prison officers, and they didn't know what to do, and Lucy went over, sort of grabbed her and gave her a big cuddle. The officers said, '"What's wrong with her?", and Lucy said, "She wants her mum".' Tellingly, when other inmates asked Lucy what she was in for, her response that it was a post on social media bamboozled them. 'They cracked up, is the correct reaction, I think,' Ray revealed. Even so, Lucy has undeniably been through difficult times while inside, not least because despite repeated requests and well-argued letters to the governor, prison authorities repeatedly denied her temporary leave – known as ROTL, or Release on Temporary Licence. Among the reasons cited for depriving her of the chance to enjoy normal conditions leading up to release was 'media interest'. Desperate for answers, when her mother Heather asked the Home Office why her daughter wasn't getting the leave to which she was entitled, the reply came back that she 'hadn't been assessed yet'. The most brutal setback came in May, however, when the Court of Appeal overturned her request to shorten her sentence. The decision, said Ray, left her 'heartbroken'. Holly was also devastated: having excitedly prepared for her mother's early return, she was told instead she would have to wait another three months. 'We're a good little team but this has knocked my daughter a little bit. She's got bad anxiety,' Ray told Talk television in the aftermath of the news. By June, at least, Lucy had been moved closer to home, having been moved back to HMP Peterborough. She was placed on the induction unit until a space became available on the enhanced wing where, as a prisoner of good character, she would receive better accommodation and her own television. Which brings us to what Richard Tice calls the 'shocking assault' on Lucy just over two months ago. Having been led to believe a room had become free on the enhanced wing, Lucy was instead told by an officer that she was being placed on A1, a wing known as 'The Bronx' due to its frequent chaotic scenes. After politely telling officers she would not go, she says she was subsequently set upon by a group or five or six officers using restraining methods that are meant to be reserved for violent or abusive prisoners. She was bent forwards, her arms bent sharply back, and her hands tightly handcuffed, leaving her in what she later described to Ray as 'excruciating pain,' before being manhandled up three flights of stairs and dumped in a filthy cell. She was then told she was on 23 hour lockdown for 14 days on what is known as 'Basics' – meaning no TV, no privilege, and food being brought to her cell. Richard Tice visited Lucy in the wake of this experience, and said he was deeply impressed by her forbearance. 'I saw Lucy in the wake of what had been fundamentally a shocking assault undertaken on her by prison officers who were clearly playing games with her,' he said. 'She was coping not only with this, but with adapting to prison life, also to the news of her appeal being rejected, but she did so with enormous equanimity although she was clearly very upset.' Having complained to the prison about her treatment and requested an investigation, Richard says he has been met with silence. 'They did not give me the courtesy of a reply which I am hugely disappointed by; I wonder if that means they cleared the officers involved of any wrongdoing,' he told the Mail. Meanwhile life on the outside has not been easy for Ray. As well as trying to parent a daughter experiencing all the trials and tribulations of adolescence without a guiding maternal hand, he has also had to navigate a number of personal brickbats of his own. A hugely popular Conservative councillor at West Northamptonshire Council, his public loyalty to his wife – he appeared on television saying she was a 'good person and not a racist' – led to 13 anonymous complaints about his 'behaviour' to the council which were referred to a London law firm to investigate. The Labour MP for Northampton South Mike Reader also called for his resignation in a statement referring to 'high standards in public discourse'. 'As [councillor] Connolly repeatedly defended the comments made, I hope he will now do the right thing and resign from West Northamptonshire Council,' Mr Reader said. In the event Ray Connolly did not resign, although he went on to lose his seat following elections in May. He remains on the town council. Arguably, he has more to worry about than his career: alongside his own health issues – he has a compromised immune system because of bone marrow issues – the family have faced enormous financial problems. Earlier this year Ray was forced to sell the family car, alongside other possessions, to pay his wife's legal fees, and at one point was facing the prospect of losing the family home. His circumstances have been eased by the creation of a JustGiving page – set up by supporters – which to date has raised nearly £160,000. The Mail understands that Ray has received £60,000 of this so far to help settle his debts. Let us not forget either that both Ray and Lucy continue to endure the almost unfathomable loss of a child, after their toddler son Harry died in 2011 as a result of gross medical negligence. It says much about the strain Lucy's imprisonment has placed him under that two months ago, in the wake of his wife's move to 'The Bronx', Ray was reduced to tears for the first time since Harry's death. Unable to cry since the loss, he confided to friends that he had wept after hearing Lucy sobbing uncontrollably down the phone. Finally husband, wife and daughter are now reunited under one roof for the first time in nine months. When asked about their plans yesterday, Ray responded only that their focus was 'to get our lives back on track'.