
Former Tory MP handed community order for harassing ex-wife
Katie Wallis, 41, was known as Jamie before she became the UK's first openly transgender MP in 2022. She represented the seat of Bridgend in South Wales from 2019 to 2022.
Wallis was sentenced today for harassing ex-wife Rebecca Wallis, now known as Rebeca Lovell.
Cardiff Magistrates' Court heard the ex-MP sent messages to her former partner accusing Ms Lovell of being "mean", demanding to know about a new partner, alleging her former wife was "cock-hunting" and calling Ms Lovell a c***" and a "f****** bitch".
The court also heard that Wallis had demanded £350,000 from Ms Lovell using an unknown phone number
In a different message, Wallis referred to her ex-wife and Ms Lovell's father as "prejudiced f******" and hoped they "never have a happy moment again".
In total, the former MP sent four messages and left one voice note.
The couple split in 2020 and finalised their divorce in 2024.
A victim impact statement from Ms Lovell said: "This is the hardest thing I have written, for so long I have had to fight against the tide of Jamie's behaviour, publicly and privately."
She added: "The woman I used to be is destroyed. I will never understand what I have done to deserve the hurt I have endured."
Ms Lovell went on to say the past six months had been "utterly devastating", adding that she feared Wallis arriving at her home and had consequently installed CCTV.
Wallis, wearing a black dress, looked down as the statement was read to the court.
Narita Bahra KC, appearing for the defence, said Wallis uses female pronouns, referring to Jamie as her "deadname".
As of last month, the former MP said her name was still legally Jamie, but she used the name Katie.
Wallis's lawyer criticised the police and prosecutors for not dealing with the matter outside of court - adding that it was "unequivocal" her client had been suffering from mental health difficulties during the offending, partly brought on by her transitioning.
Ms Bahra said Wallis was suffering from PTSD, a depressive disorder and an adjustment disorder.
District Judge Rhys Williams handed Wallis a 12-month community order and a fine worth £1,264.
Wallis admitted leaving the messages at a hearing in June, having previously denied the charges.
The former MP asked Ms Lovell for help in the final message, and claimed she was experiencing head pain.
Wallis was sectioned under the Mental Health Act after being found by police, and was later arrested and then charged.
Her plea changed when allegations of having driven by Ms Lovell's home were removed from the charge.
Wallis was previously convicted of driving offences in 2022 after crashing a car into a telegraph pole before fleeing the scene.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
Moment man dumps rats outside Sheffield mosque in hate crime
This is the shocking moment a man releases rats outside a mosque in Sheffield as part of a series of racially motivated hate crimes. CCTV footage shows Edmund Fowler, 66, taking cages containing rats from his car boot and dumping them outside Sheffield Grand Mosque on Grimesthorpe Road, with the vermin appearing to run in through the fence. The 66-year-old repeated this on three other occasions between May and June. Fowler, of Skelwith Drive, Sheffield, pleaded guilty to four counts of racially aggravated harassment at Sheffield Magistrates' Court. On Thursday (16 July), he was sentenced to 18 weeks in prison, suspended for 18 months, and banned from going near a mosque for 18 months.


The Guardian
22 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Armed police threatened to arrest Kent protester for holding Palestinian flag
Armed police threatened a peaceful protester with arrest under the Terrorism Act for holding a Palestinian flag and having signs saying 'Free Gaza' and 'Israel is committing genocide', accusing her of supporting a proscribed organisation. Officers told Laura Murton, 42, that her demonstration in Canterbury, Kent, on Monday evening expressed views supportive of Palestine Action, which was banned under terrorism legislation earlier this month. Murton said neither of her signs mentioned Palestine Action. When asked directly whether she supported any proscribed organisations, she replied: 'I do not.' In the encounter, which she filmed, one officer told her: 'Mentioning freedom of Gaza, Israel, genocide, all of that all come under proscribed groups, which are terror groups that have been dictated by the government.' He went on to say that the phrase 'Free Gaza' is 'supportive of Palestine Action', adding it was an offence 'to express an opinion or belief that is supportive of a proscribed organisation, namely Palestine Action is an offence under section 12(1A) of the Terrorism Act'. The officer told her she had committed that offence. The officers said they would arrest Murton unless she provided her name and address, which she reluctantly agreed to do. Speaking to the Guardian, Murton said: 'I don't see how anything I was wearing, how anything I was displaying, anything I was saying, could be deemed as supportive of the proscribed group.' 'It's terrifying, I was standing there thinking, this is the most authority, authoritarian, dystopian experience I've had in this country, being told that I'm committing terrorist offences by two guys with firearms.' 'I ended up giving my details, and I really resent the fact I had to do that because I don't think that was lawful at all.' The ban on Palestine Action, the first against a direct action protest group, came into force on 5 July after a high court judge refused to grant the group's co-founder Huda Ammori an injunction suspending it while legal action was pending. In written submissions, Raza Husain KC and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh KC, representing Ammori, warned: 'Proscription of Palestine Action is highly likely to have a wide chilling effect on speech and assembly of those seeking to speak out against Israel's serious violations of international law in the occupied Palestinian territory, including in Gaza.' During an unsuccessful attempt to appeal against the decision, Ní Ghrálaigh told the court of appeal 'a vast number of individuals who wished to continue protesting would fall foul of the proscription regime due to its lack of clarity'. One of the police officers told Murton they were 'trying to be fair', adding: 'We could have jumped out, arrested you, dragged you off in a van.' Explaining her motivation for the protest, Murton, who lives in Canterbury, said: 'Day to day, people are getting killed, and I can't handle that. I can't handle sitting and doing nothing. Just showing up during rush hour to remind people that Palestine exists and that genocide is happening and try to keep it in the public consciousness – it wasn't motivated by anything other than that.' Tom Southerden, Amnesty International UK's law and human rights director, described the footage as 'very concerning'. He added: 'We have long criticised UK terrorism law for being excessively broad and vaguely worded and a threat to freedom of expression. This video documents one aspect of exactly the kind of thing we were warning about.' A Kent police spokesperson said: 'Under the Terrorism Act it is a criminal offence to carry or display items that may arouse reasonable suspicion that an individual is a member or supporter of a proscribed organisation such as Palestine Action.'


Times
27 minutes ago
- Times
All 6.5m Co-op members had data stolen in cyberattack
All 6.5 million members of Co-op had their data stolen in the cyberattack in April, the retailer's chief executive has revealed. Shirine Khoury-Haq said she was 'incredibly sorry' for the attack that resulted in names, addresses and contact information being accessed. She told BBC Breakfast that 'no financial data, no transaction data' had been compromised but acknowledged that people will be worried and that 'all members should be concerned'. Co-op is owned by its members, who receive rewards when it generates profit and help to make decisions. The retail group shut its IT systems after the attack, leading to supply and payment issues. It was one of three high-profile cyberattacks in Britain last spring; Marks & Spencer and Harrods were also targeted. Four people have been arrested and were bailed on Wednesday. Khoury-Haq said: 'I'm devastated that information was taken. I'm also devastated by the impact that it took on our colleagues as they tried to contain all of this. 'Early on I met with our IT staff and they were in the midst of it. I will never forget the looks on their faces, trying to fight off these criminals and protect our members' data and trying to protect our organisation as well. That will never leave me.' She added: 'We realised it was happening when the cybercriminals started moving around within our systems and that is when we took action to stop them. It meant shutting down our systems quite dramatically. The good news was that we managed to keep our front lines open — our stores and funeral homes stayed open but the impact on colleagues, the impact on our stores, our members, was significant.' The four people were arrested on July 10: a British 17-year-old and Latvian 19-year-old from the West Midlands, a British 19-year-old from London and a British 20-year-old from Staffordshire. They were all arrested at their homes on suspicion of blackmail, money laundering, offences linked to the Computer Misuse Act and participating in the activities of an organised crime group, according to the National Crime Agency. The police seized electronic devices from the properties. M&S was the first of the retailers to be targeted in a cyberattack and was forced to shut a host of systems on Easter Sunday. Its website was shut for six weeks, fuelling a bill that the company put at about £300 million. On Wednesday the Co-op announced a partnership with The Hacking Games, a business that identifies young people with 'unconventional' cyber talents and coaches them for careers in cybersecurity rather than crime.