logo
Tommy Robinson 'in Tenerife' after St Pancras station assault

Tommy Robinson 'in Tenerife' after St Pancras station assault

Yahoo2 days ago
A British tourist claims he saw Tommy Robinson boarding a flight to Tenerife following an alleged assault at London's St Pancras station.
The 42-year-old far-right political activist flew out of the UK as police launched an investigation into an incident in which a man was knocked unconscious on the walkway leading to the station's Thameslink hub.
Video footage shared on TikTok on Tuesday by a British tourist appeared to show a man fitting Tommy Robinson's description boarding an airport shuttle.
He was wearing a black t-shirt and shorts, a black cap and white trainers, with a visible tattoo on his left leg.
The video was captioned: 'Spotted Tommy Robinson getting on my flight this morning.'
In another video, the man alleged to be Robinson lifted his cap at the security gates so that a staff member could check his face against his passport photo.
Later that day, the British TikToker shared another video tagged with a Tenerife location.
Footage shared widely on social media this week, shows an agitated Robinson shouting 'you saw him, he came at me' as a man appears to lay unresponsive and bleeding on the floor.
Robinson later claimed in a video he had a fight with a door after showing off a cut on his forehead.
But a fellow passenger claimed they saw Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, arguing with an older man before 'punching him so hard it knocked him out'.
They said Robinson allegedly shouted at him to "come at me then" before he "punched the man so hard he was knocked out".
The witness had been on the way to catch a train when he "heard a loud commotion and arguing" at the top of the Platform B escalator.
He said that as he approached the top, he saw the pair "facing off and standing very close to each other".
The witness told MailOnline that the alleged assault seemed "very serious" as the individual "wasn't moving afterwards".
Robinson could then be seen leaving down a staircase, while another man can be heard saying "quick, can we get someone here" to staff.
He then comes back up the stairs and appears to tell the man "he come at me bruv, you saw that".
Since the clip emerged, Robinson reposted a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, from a user which read: "If you approach someone with hostility, a man that receives death threats daily, expect to get a clip round the ear hole."
In an update, British Transport Police said: "BTP were called to St Pancras station just after 8.40pm yesterday (July 28) following reports of an assault.
"Officers attended and a man was taken to hospital with serious injuries, which are not thought to be life threatening.
"Overnight the investigation has been ongoing and officers have been making arrest enquiries.
"Officers have confirmed that the suspect, a 42-year-old man from Bedfordshire, boarded a flight out of the country in the early hours of this morning.
"Detectives are continuing to work closely to progress the investigation and bring him into custody for questioning."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police worker gets misconduct warning over handling of 999 call before four deaths
Police worker gets misconduct warning over handling of 999 call before four deaths

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Police worker gets misconduct warning over handling of 999 call before four deaths

A police staff member has been given a final written warning for misconduct over their handling of a 999 call made by a man before he apparently killed three family members and himself. Officers found the bodies of Bartlomiej Kuczynski, 45, his two daughters Jasmin Kuczynska, 12, and eight-year-old Natasha Kuczynska and their aunt Kanticha Sukpengpanao, 36, on January 19 2024. The four were all found inside a property in Allan Bedford Crescent in Costessey, Norfolk. Post-mortem examinations recorded that all four died of neck wounds. The deaths of the two girls and their aunt were being treated as murder, while the death of Mr Kuczynski was not being treated as suspicious. Norfolk Police said officers were not looking for anyone else in connection with the killings. The force had received a 999 call from Mr Kuzcynski on the morning of January 19 but officers were not deployed to the address until an hour later when police were called by a concerned dog walker, watchdog the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) said. In an audio recording of the call, Mr Kuczynski said: 'I am walking with the knife, I have just lost the plot.' Mr Kuczynski expressed concerns about his own mental state and said he was confused. The call handler advised him to seek medical advice and police did not attend the property as a result of the call. When questioned as part of the IOPC investigation, the call handler said he did not hear the word 'knife' and would have acted differently had he done so. The call handler was initially suspended but returned to work following a review and was put on restricted duties. Norfolk Police said on Friday that a member of staff had been given a final written warning following a misconduct investigation into the handling of the 999 call. The force said in a statement: 'The IOPC investigation concluded the call handler had a case to answer for misconduct based on their handling of the call and failing to record their risk assessment in their decision-making. 'The force accepted this conclusion, and a misconduct meeting was held on June 26 2025 where the chair determined misconduct to be proven and issued a final written warning for 12 months.' The misconduct meeting was not held in public. Norfolk Police said that the worker remains employed by the force as a member of police staff, and is no longer on restricted duties. A full inquest into the deaths is anticipated to take place in 2026 pending the completion of a Domestic Homicide Review.

WATCH: Trump says he is hopeful Hillary Clinton will be investigated for election fraud
WATCH: Trump says he is hopeful Hillary Clinton will be investigated for election fraud

Fox News

time30 minutes ago

  • Fox News

WATCH: Trump says he is hopeful Hillary Clinton will be investigated for election fraud

Speaking with reporters on Friday afternoon, President Donald Trump expressed that he is hopeful former presidential opponent Hillary Clinton will finally be investigated for election fraud. Shortly before departing for New Jersey, Trump was asked by a reporter, "Will Hillary Clinton finally be investigated for election fraud?" Trump answered, "I hope so, I hope so. I don't know whether or not that'll happen, but I hope so." During his brief exchange with reporters outside the White House, Trump also repeatedly criticized Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, whom he recently removed. The president connected his recent decision to fire McEntarfer, whom he accused of falsifying jobs report numbers, to efforts to sway previous elections against him. "You have to have honest reports and when you look at those numbers or when you look at just before the election and then after the election, they corrected it by 8 or 900,000 jobs," he said. "Why should anybody trust numbers? You go back to election day. Look what happened 2 or 3 days before with massive, wonderful jobs numbers, trying to get him elected or her elected, trying to get whoever the hell was running because you go back and they came out with numbers that were very favorable to Kamala," he went on. "And then on the 15th of November or thereabouts, they added 8 or 900,000 overstatement reduction right after the election." Addressing a reporter directly, Trump added, "It didn't work because, you know who won, John? I won." Trump's comments regarding Clinton hearken back all the way to his first presidential campaign during which he warned that if he were president he would get his attorney general to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate her behavior. In one of the 2016 debates Trump famously quipped to Clinton that if he was president: "you'd be in jail." As president, however, Trump has not moved to prosecute Clinton, who served as former President Barack Obama's secretary of state from 2009 to 2013. This July, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard released evidence that she said suggest the Obama administration promoted a "contrived narrative" that Russia interfered in the 2016 election. "There is irrefutable evidence that details how President Obama and his national security team directed the creation of an intelligence community assessment that they knew was false," Gabbard said. "They knew it would promote this contrived narrative that Russia interfered in the 2016 election to help President Trump win, selling it to the American people as though it were true. It wasn't." "We have referred and will continue to refer all of these documents to the Department of Justice and the FBI, to investigate the criminal implications of this for the evidence," Gabbard said. "The evidence that we have found, and that we have released, directly point to President Obama leading the manufacturing of this intelligence assessment. There are multiple pieces of evidence and intelligence that confirm that fact." In a July interview, Trump described the Russiagate allegations against Obama and members of his administration as "serious treason." "What they've done is so bad for this country. And it really started right at the 2016 election," Trump claimed of Gabbard's findings. "And there's a difference when you know it — and when you know it, and it's all written down for you. I mean, it's all there. It's right there. The orders, the memos, the whole thing. It's right there."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store