Army veteran who urged end to ‘Jewish control’ found guilty of anti-Semitic race hate
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Army veteran who urged end to ‘Jewish control’ found guilty of anti-Semitic race hate

Jeremy Bedford-Turner faces up to seven years' imprisonment for speech calling for soldiers to liberate England from Jews

Army veteran Jeremy Bedford-Turner at Southwark Crown Court 

Photo credit: Sam Blewett/PA Wire
Army veteran Jeremy Bedford-Turner at Southwark Crown Court Photo credit: Sam Blewett/PA Wire

A far-right Army veteran has been found guilty of stirring up racial hatred after the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) was pressured to reconsider not bringing charges against him.

Jeremy Bedford-Turner, 48, called for his “soldiers” to liberate England from “Jewish control” in an address outside Downing Street and blamed Jews for issues ranging from both World Wars to Jack the Ripper.

The CPS declined to prosecute the anti-Semite after an initial complaint but re-considered the decision after a group brought a legal challenge at the High Court.

Bedford-Turner now faces up to seven years’ imprisonment after a jury at Southwark Crown Court on Monday found him guilty of one count of stirring up racial hatred following two hours of deliberation.

“Nice knowing you, chaps,” he told his supporters before entering the dock.

The 15-minute speech was made at a rally against Jewish neighbourhood watch group Shomrim in Whitehall, central London, on July 4 2015.

Bedford-Turner, who served for 12 years in the Army speaking Pashtu and Arabic, told the crowd: “Let’s free England from Jewish control. Let’s liberate this land.

“Listen, soldiers, listen to me. It’s time to liberate our country.”

Under cross-examination during his two-day trial attended by dozens of Bedford-Turner’s supporters, he admitted wanting all Jews to leave the UK.

Prosecutor Louis Mably QC said the defendant was “absolutely obsessed” with Jewish people and that he “despises” them.

The Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) previously said it brought the “unusual step” of bringing a judicial review after prosecutors declined to charge Bedford-Turner after an initial complaint.

“CAA was partly motivated by a growing concern that the CPS is failing to take anti-Semitic crime seriously,” a CAA spokesman said.

The CPS then said in March last year that it would get a more senior lawyer to review the case, and decided to press charges.

The case of Bedford-Turner, of no fixed abode, was adjourned until Monday afternoon when the judge will decide whether to sentence him at a later date.

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