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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Fionnula Hainey

Tommy Robinson fined £900 for failing to turn up to court after losing libel case

Tommy Robinson has been fined £900 for failing to turn up to court to be questioned about his finances. The 39-year-old, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, lost a libel case brought against him by a Syrian teenager last year.

The English Defence League founder was supposed to appear at a High Court hearing in March over an unpaid legal bill following the case. However, he failed to attend and was summonsed to court to face contempt proceedings in April.

Schoolboy Jamal Hijazi successfully sued Yaxley-Lennon after he was assaulted at Almondbury Community School in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, in October 2018. After the incident went viral, Yaxley-Lennon made false claims about Mr Hijazi, including that he had attacked girls in his school, which led to the libel case.

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Following a pre-trial hearing in November 2020, Yaxley-Lennon was ordered to pay more than £43,000 in legal costs. Earlier this year, Mr Hijazi’s lawyers successfully applied for an order requiring Robinson to return to court to answer questions about his finances on March 22, but he did not show up.

On Monday, August 1, Yaxley-Lennon was handed a £900 penalty after admitting being in contempt of court. At the hearing, Mr Justice Nicklin told the court that he could be liable to serve 28 days in prison if he fails to pay the fine within 14 days.

The High Court was previously told that Robinson had been facing mental health issues at the time of the March hearing, which he claimed were a result of being harassed. However, Mr Justice Nicklin said: “Whatever psychiatric issues Mr Lennon had, they did not prevent him from coming to the hearing that he failed to turn up at.”

The judge later said Robinson had recently published a video asking for support, including the words “Don’t let them lock Tommy up again” and “Keep him free of the clutches of the corrupt establishment”. Mr Justice Nicklin said he had decided to fine Robinson prior to seeing the video and that “it was never serious enough to justify a period of imprisonment”.

The High Court judge also noted that Robinson had legal aid for his barrister for Monday’s hearing, adding: “He was in no need for donations for his representation today, the state was paying for it.”

In June, Robinson appeared at the High Court to be questioned over his finances at the postponed hearing, where he told the court that, in a two-year period prior to declaring bankruptcy, he spent around £100,000 on gambling – largely in casinos.

Robinson was previously jailed after being found in contempt of court after he filmed men accused of the sexual exploitation of young girls and live-streamed the footage on Facebook, in breach of a reporting ban, outside Leeds Crown Court in May 2018. He was sentenced to 13 months in jail after being found in contempt of court on the day of the broadcast but served just two months before being freed after that finding of contempt was overturned by the Court of Appeal in August 2018.

The case was then referred back to the Attorney General and he was jailed again in July 2019.

Following Mr Hijazi’s successful libel claim, Mr Justice Nicklin ordered Robinson to pay him damages of £100,000 and his legal costs, thought to be around £500,000.

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