Anti-Semitic blogger, 57, is being sent back to jail dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A COUPLE hatched a plan to kill a man with fire after he pawned a watch worth a couple of pounds. Jane Reilly and Alan Archer nearly killed their victim when they doused him with petrol and set him alight. Their anger all boiled down to Reilly not being happy that the man had pawned a watch she had given him after leaving her pie and mash store. Judge Samantha Leigh shared the shocking tale in her sentencing remarks at court yesterday. She said: “Archer, you were homeless, and you knew other men from being homeless and knew the victim as well.
Southend couple planned to burn man alive over cheap watch echo-news.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from echo-news.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Anti-Semitic blogger Alison Chabloz (pictured outside court last month)
An anti-Semitic blogger who said Hitler was right and that Jewish people use the Holocaust as an eternal cash cow claims she should not have been prosecuted after she was jailed for 18 weeks.
Alison Chabloz, 57, is appealing against the sentence which was imposed at Westminster Magistrates Court last month.
She made grossly offensive anti-Semitic remarks on a US podcast which she promoted via a social media website called Gab.
The site is popular with far-right extremists.
Those comments breached a previous suspended sentence imposed in 2018 for broadcasting anti-Semitic songs.
Chabloz was convicted of three counts of sending by a public communications network an offensive, indecent or menacing message or material.
Alison Chabloz, 56, made anti-Semitic comments during published US podcast
The podcast was later promoted on a far-right social media website called Gab
Westminster Magistrates Court heard she had suspended sentence at the time
Judge said he was not jailing her for being anti-Semitic or a Holocaust denier
He said it was for making grossly offensive comments on suspended sentence
Chabloz, of London, found guilty of sending grossly offensive communications