People accused of taking part in far-right riots across the UK have been crying and calling out for their mums as they appear in court.
At least 378 people have been arrested so far as the anti-immigrant and anti-Islam in riots seen across the UK.
Follow our live blog for all the latest updates from the far-right riots
Hundreds of rioters hijacked a vigil for Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine, in Southport on Tuesday.
Disturbances have since spread across the UK, with rioters taking to the strees in London, Manchester, Hartlepool and Aldershot on Wednesday.
Clashes have since been seen in Liverpool, Blackpool, Hull, Stoke-on-Trent, Leeds, Nottingham, Bristol and Belfast.
So who has appeared in court so far?
Liam Riley, 41
Liam Riley, 41, of Walton Road in Liverpool, pleaded guilty at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court to violent disorder and racially-aggravated threatening behaviour in the city centre on Saturday.
Joshua Sanderson-Kirk, prosecuting, said he was among a group of about 100 people.
When police moved to disperse them the defendant âstood his groundâ, shouting and waving his arms before officers detained him, the court heard.
Mr Sanderson-Kirk said: âHe was shouting at officers, telling them they were traitors and Muslim lovers.â
He appeared very drunk and had a poster saying âThis is our cityâ, having come to the city centre, with a St Georgeâs Flag, to attend a protest at the Pier Head, the court heard.
No bail application was made and he was remanded in custody to appear at Liverpool Crown Court for sentencing on August 30.
Lloyd Killner, 35
Lloyd Killner, 35, of Lincoln, Lincolnshire, appeared at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court charged with violent disorder in Liverpool city centre on Saturday.
Asked to enter a plea, he said: âNot guilty, I was on my own.â
He was remanded in custody to appear at Liverpool Crown Court on August 30.
Declan Geiran, 29
Declan Geiran, 29, of Kelso Road, Liverpool, has pleaded guilty at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court to violent disorder and arson.
Joshua Sanderson-Kirk, prosecuting, said on Saturday Geiran was seen on CCTV in Liverpool city centre using an âimplementâ to set fire to a police Ford Transit van which had been abandoned by officers.
He was tracked by CCTV and arrested, the court heard.
No application for bail was made and Geiran was remanded in custody ahead of a sentencing hearing at Liverpool Crown Court on August 30.
Ryan Sheers, 28
Ryan Sheers, 28, pleaded guilty to violent disorder at Teesside Magistratesâ Court.
Sheers, a former McDonaldâs worker, was filmed yelling insults at police officers, shouting âdonât touch me, I pay your wagesâ, and refused to back away as the cordon advanced.
He was bitten on the rear by a police dog as its handler approached him.
Steven Mailen, 54
Steven Mailen, 54, pleaded guilty to violent disorder at Teesside Magistratesâ Court.
Prosecutors said Mailen joined in the fray in Hartlepool on Wednesday night and was âconstantly in the face of officersâ.
He was seen shouting and squaring up to them, only backing down when an officer struck him on the leg with a baton.
Jimmy Bailey, 45
Jimmy Bailey, 45, of Station Avenue in Little Sutton, Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, pleaded not guilty at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court to violent disorder.
He is accused of being involved in disorder in Paradise Street in Liverpool city centre on Saturday.
He was remanded in custody to appear at Liverpool Crown Court on August 30.
John OâMalley, 43
John OâMalley, 43, of Cambridge Gardens in Southport, pleaded guilty at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court to violent disorder.
The court heard he was identified by a member of public on footage showing violent scenes in Southport on Tuesday night.
District Judge Timothy Boswell refused bail and remanded OâMalley in custody to appear at Liverpool Crown Court on August 29.
Gareth Metcalfe, 44
Gareth Metcalfe, 44, of Cambridge Gardens in Southport, appeared at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court charged with violent disorder in Southport last Tuesday.
He spoke to confirm his name, address and date of birth and gave no indication of plea.
No application for bail was made and Metcalfe was remanded in custody to appear at Liverpool Crown Court on August 29.
Carl Holliday, 30
A 30-year-old man pleaded guilty to violent disorder during a protest in Hartlepool, a courts spokesperson said.
Carl Holliday, of Tankerville Street in Hartlepool, admitted the offence when he appeared at Teesside Magistrates Court and was remanded in custody until sentencing at Teesside Crown Court on September 2.
Tamsyn Cerr, 21
Tamsyn Cerr, 21, of Firby Close in Hartlepool, did not enter a plea to the same charge and was remanded in custody until her next appearance at crown court, also on September 2.
William Nelson Morgan, 69
William Nelson Morgan, 69, has pleaded guilty at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court to violent disorder and possessing an offensive weapon in a public place.
The court heard he was identified in a crowd who were throwing bricks towards officers on County Road on Saturday night and had a wooden baton with him.
He resisted arrest and shouted at an officer to get off him when he was detained, the court was told.
District Judge Timothy Boswell remanded the defendant in custody to appear for sentence at Liverpool Crown Court on August 29.
Unnamed boy, 14
A 14-year-old boy has pleaded guilty at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court, sitting as a youth court, to violent disorder.
Joshua Sanderson-Kirk, prosecuting, said the boy was seen by police officers among a group of eight to 12 other young people in Clayton Square, Liverpool, at about 10.30pm on August 3 setting fireworks off in the direction of members of the public and a police carrier.
He said: âThey exploded underneath the police carrier.â
The court heard the boy, who cannot be named because of his age, said âIâm sorry, I wasnât firing them at you, thoughâ, when he was arrested by police after they gave chase. He had five fireworks and a lighter in his possession.
The boy, whose father and uncle were in court, has no previous convictions, the court heard.
Iqbal Singh Kang, defending, said the teenager had been in the city centre to catch a bus home: âHe did not head into the city centre with the intention of causing any kind of disturbance or adding to the disorder.
âWithout thinking things through, he became involved in something much more serious. Itâs completely out of the blue.â
The boy was released on bail until August 27, when he will be sentenced.
Curtis Coulson, 30
Curtis Coulson, 30, sobbed as he became the first person to appear before Sheffield Magistrates Court following disorder in South Yorkshire over the weekend.
Coulson wiped away tears with a tissue as he sat in the glass-fronted dock and denied affray.
The alleged offence relates to an incident outside Sheffield City Hall on Sunday in which he is alleged to have swung a stick at a woman.
Coulson was refused bail and will go on trial at the same court in September.
Bernard Lavery, 34
Bail has been refused to a man described by police in court as playing a âsignificant roleâ in an anti-immigration protest in Belfast on Saturday.
Bernard Lavery, 34, from Farnham Street in Belfast, appeared at Belfast Magistratesâ Court charged with taking part in an unnotified public procession.
A PSNI detective constable told the court that Lavery had been at the front of the protest on Saturday carrying a Irish tricolour flag and said that police believe he played a âsignificant roleâ in leading the march.
A defence lawyer said his client had been fully co-operative with police and denied having any leadership role in the protest. He said his client had only attended after a flyer was posted through his door.
Lavery was denied bail and was remanded in custody until September 2.
Ellis Wharton, 22
Ellis Wharton, 22, of Selwyn Street, Liverpool, pleaded guilty at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court to burglary other than dwelling, with intent to steal, at Spellow Library on County Road in Walton.
Wharton, who had a black eye, pleaded not guilty to assault by beating of an emergency worker, Pc Thomas Nielsen.
District Judge Timothy Boswell refused an application for bail and remanded him in custody to Liverpool Crown Court on August 29.
Whartonâs brother Adam had appeared earlier in the morning and also indicated a guilty plea to the burglary charge, on the basis of joint enterprise.
Simeon Eric McCullough, 46
Simeon Eric McCullough, 46, of Schomberg Drive in Belfast, who was charged with disorderly behaviour and resisting police.
His bail was refused by a district judge.
Gary Creighton, 38
Bail was also refused to Gary Creighton, 38, from Inishowen Drive in Belfast, who was charged with possession of an offensive weapon with intent to commit an indictable offence, possession of fireworks without a licence, and riotous behaviour.
He also faced a charge of disorderly behaviour.
Derek Drummond, 58
Derek Drummond, 58, of Pool Street, Southport, indicated guilty pleas to violent disorder and assault by beating of an emergency worker at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court.
Joshua Sanderson-Kirk, prosecuting, said PC Thomas Ball was deployed to the mosque on St Lukeâs Road, Southport, on July 30, where a group of around 300 people arrived shouting âthis is our f****** countryâ and âscumbag bastardsâ.
The court heard officers had to withdraw for fear of being overwhelmed.
PC Ball stood to protect colleagues as they tried to put on riot gear when Drummond became violent, shouting âshithousesâ and moved towards him, punching him in the face, Mr Sanderson-Kirk said.
Bricks were later thrown after a garden wall was broken down, the court was told.
Short clips of footage from a body-worn camera and the police helicopter were shown to the court.
No application for bail was made and District Judge Timothy Boswell remanded
Drummond in custody for sentencing at Liverpool Crown Court on August 29.
Two women sat at the back of the court for the hearing, one was in tears and the other blew Drummond a kiss as he left.
Brian Gilby, 27
A man has admitted taking vapes from a shop in Sunderland that was damaged during the disorder, but denied being part of the protests.
Brian Gilby, 27, of no fixed abode, pleaded not guilty to violent disorder when he appeared at South Tyneside Magistrates Court on Monday.
He pleaded guilty to a charge of burglary. The court heard he was seen on footage going into a damaged shop and taking boxes of vapes.
Heather Bolton, defending, said Gilby denied being part of the protests or of any violent disorder, but was out âsocialising with friendsâ in the city centre when he saw a shop âthat had already been damagedâ and went inside.
Gilby was remanded in custody and will make his first appearance at a crown court on September 2.
Leanne Hodgson, 43
A woman has pleaded guilty to violent disorder after being seen on footage pushing a large bin towards a police line during unrest in Sunderland.
Leanne Hodgson, 43, of Holborn Road, Sunderland, denies being involved in the original march but says she had been out drinking and became involved in the disorder when the pub closed, a court heard.
South Tyneside Magistrates Court was told she âcame out into the street, was very drunk and angry, and behaved as describedâ.
John Garside, prosecuting, said âthere was a large crowd cheering and joining inâ as Hodgson pushed the bin at officers. She was later arrested at her home address.
The defendant, who has a âlong-running alcohol problem,â was remanded in custody to be sentenced on September 2.
District Judge Zoe Passfield told her: âThis was large-scale mob violence which resulted in fear to the public and damage to local businesses. There is absolutely no justification for it. You chose to involve yourself in it.â
Adam Wharton, 28
Adam Wharton, 28, of Selwyn Street, Liverpool, indicated a guilty plea to burglary other than dwelling with intent to steal at Liverpool Magistratesâ Court and was sent to Liverpool Crown Court to be sentenced on August 29.
Joshua Sanderson-Kirk, prosecuting, said Wharton was seen outside the Spellow Library on County Road on Sunday, wearing a balaclava and âsweating profuselyâ.
The library had previously been burnt out and looted, the court heard.
Wharton, wearing a grey tracksuit and with long curly hair, was remanded in custody ahead of sentencing.
Andrew Smith, 41
A 41-year-old man has pleaded guilty to violent disorder following unrest in Sunderland.
Andrew Smith, of High Street East, Sunderland, has been remanded in custody until September 2, when he will be sentenced at Newcastle Crown Court.
Shaun Doran, 48
Shaun Doran, 48, of Villette Road, Sunderland, pleaded not guilty to the same offence when he appeared at South Tyneside Magistratesâ Court.
He was also remanded in custody until his next hearing, also to take place on September 2 at Newcastle Crown Court.
Clinton Morrison, 31
A man accused of violent disorder over unrest in Sunderland has been remanded in custody.
Clinton Morrison, 31, of Saint Barnabas Way, Sunderland, did not indicate a plea when he appeared at South Tyneside Magistrates Court on Monday.
A date for a crown court hearing was set for September 2.
Josh Kellett, 29
A man has pleaded guilty to violent disorder after unrest in Sunderland on Friday.
Josh Kellett, 29, of Southcroft, Washington, admitted the offence at South Tyneside Magistrates Court on Monday.
The court heard he was seen on footage throwing a stone towards police officers while part of a large group.
He was wearing a balaclava but was identified by his âdistinctive tattoos,â it was said.
Kellett was remanded in custody until his sentencing at crown court on September 2, after a district judge said his case was âtoo serious for this courtâ.
Gareth Rigby, 43
Gareth Rigby was fined after he admitted a single charge of using threatening words or behaviour.
The 43-year-old had 15 previous convictions for 23 offences including being drunk and disorderly last year.
Hamza Mohammed, 23
Hamza Mohammed, 23, a salesman from Bolton, was charged with possessing fireworks.
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