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The Prince of Wales paints on a wall in Croydon as he and the Duchess of Cornwall visited the area blighted by the recent riots. Steve Parsons/PA Wire/Press Association Images

More than one thousand people now charged in London riots probe

A significant milestone is hit amid concern about sentences being handed down for those who did and didn’t actually take part in the rioting and looting.

LONDON’S METROPOLITAN POLICE say more than 1,000 people have now been charged in the unrest that rocked the capital for four days, as human rights groups reiterated concerns that the sentences being handed out nationwide are disproportionate.

Acting chief Tim Godwin issued a statement Wednesday that said while hitting the 1,000-charged milestone is significant, the investigation is ongoing. He urged the public to turn in anyone involved in the disorder: ”Don’t let them get away with it,” he said.

UK police have arrested more than 3,000 people over riots that erupted on 6 August in north London and flared for four nights across the capital and other English cities.

The huge numbers and public anger has sparked concerns that judges were handing out sentences that were disproportionate. Some of the concerns centered around two men in northwestern England, who were handed stiff jail terms for inciting disorder through social networking sites.

Facebook

Cheshire Police said Jordan Blackshaw, 20, and Perry Sutcliffe-Keenan, 22, both received four-year sentences for using Facebook to “organise and orchestrate” disorder.

Blackshaw used the social networking site to create an event — with a date, time and location — for “massive Northwich lootin.’” Sutcliffe created a page on Facebook called “Warrington Riots” which listed a time and date for anyone who wished to be involved in a riot. The riots discussed never occurred.

The Crown Prosecution Service defended the sentences, saying the web pages caused panic and revulsion to the people of Cheshire. A lawyer representing the 20-year-old said his client is remorseful and that his family is “shocked and upset” by the length of the sentence.

“Jordan originally set up the Facebook site for a joke, which he accepts was in bad taste and inappropriate,” Chris Johnson said.

Prime Minister David Cameron said sending “a very clear message” that rioting is wrong is exactly what the justice system should be doing. ”They decided in that court to send a tough sentence, send a tough message and I think it’s very good that courts are able to do that,” he said.

Most of the convicted suspects have been sent for sentencing to higher courts, which have the power to impose longer terms of imprisonment. Two-thirds of the accused have not been granted bail.

Struggling courts

Some of the harsher sentences, in addition to Blackshaw’s, also are expected to be appealed. ”It will be a further drag on the court system, which is already struggling — and that’s before considering the pressures on the prison system,” said Andrew Neilson of the Howard League for Penal Reform.

Prime Minister David Cameron has said those who participated in the riots should go to prison, but the government has insisted it is not trying to influence the judiciary.

Meanwhile, the police said on Wednesday that a fourth man has been charged with murder in the deaths of three men in a hit-and-run attack during riots in the English city of Birmingham, the deadliest incident of the unrest.

West Midlands Police say the 30-year-old will appear at Birmingham Magistrates Court today in connection with the murders of Haroon Jahan, 20, and brothers Shazad Ali, 30, and Abdul Musavir, 31. They were killed after a car, allegedly containing several looters, struck them at high speed as they stood guard in front of a row of Pakistani-owned shops.

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