Old Bailey: National Action Far Right Group Want Non Whites Wiped Out

Old Bailey: National Action Far Right Group Want Non Whites Wiped Out

By James Simons-

The man who admitted plotting to murder MP Rosie Cooper belonged to a banned far-right group that aimed to “wipe out” non-whites “by any means necessary”, jurors have heard.

Jack Renshaw, 23, was a member of the National Action Far Right Group – a neo Nazi organisation founded in 2013 which meet in secret and generally ban its members from talking openly about their conduct.  It is the first far right group to be proscribed sin the Uk since the second World War.

Twisted Renshaw has already  admitted at the Old Bailey to preparing acts of terrorism by buying a large knife to kill his local MP as well as threatening to kill a police officer he had a grudge against.

In July last year, he was allegedly given the blessing of National Action leader Christopher Lythgoe, 32, who told him not to “f*** it up”.  However,  32 year old Lythgoe has denied giving Renshaw permission to murder the West Lancashire MP on behalf of National Action.

Image result for mp rosie cooper

Targeted:  MP Rosie Cooper

Credits:RosieCooper.net

Four other men standing trial at the Old Bailey have all  denied  being members of the evil National Action group, after it was banned in December 2016 for supporting the murder of MP Jo Cox. The National Action Far right group is essentially evil with extremely violent intentions of perpetuating hate crime in the UK. The group in its past has expressed a sick admiration for Adolf Hitler- one of the most evil and despised world  leader in human history.

At the Old Bailey, Mr Mullen, from Widnes, Cheshire, said he joined National Action in 2015 after discovering about it on the internet at the age of 18. Mullen told jurors that the group stood for “the free white man” and was against “everything – Jews, blacks, Asians, every non-white”.

Prosecutor Duncan Atkinson QC asked what National Action hoped to achieve.

Mr Mullen replied: “Wipe them out by any means necessary. War, anything.” Mullens outright confession and exposure of the group came as a shock, as his words shook the entire court room, jurors dumbfounded by his stark admission. Mullen showed no fear in implicating all the defendants in the extreme right-wing organisation, as he insisted they had continued to be members of the group after the ban.

Asked why he had first contacted Hope Not Hate in April last year, he said: “I honestly think to get out of National Action.”

Renshaw, from Skelmersdale, Lancashire and Lythgoe, from Warrington, are on trial. Others on trial in this case include Garron Helm, 24, of Seaforth, Merseyside, Matthew Hankinson, 24, of Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside, Andrew Clarke, 33, and Michal Trubini, 35, both of Warrington.

Credits Of Renshaw Pic