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Man convicted of glorifying terrorist actions jailed for seven-and-a-half years

Sam Imrie was also convicted of possessing extreme pornography, including indecent images of children.

Lucinda Cameron
Thursday 02 December 2021 11:34 GMT
Sam Imrie was sentenced at the High Court in Glasgow (John Linton/PA)
Sam Imrie was sentenced at the High Court in Glasgow (John Linton/PA) (PA Archive)

A ā€œdespicableā€ man who glorified terrorist acts by mass murderers online and encouraged terrorism has been jailed for seven-and-a-half years.

Sam Imrie was convicted of two charges under separate Terrorism Acts and six other charges following a trial at the High Court in Edinburgh in October.

He posted statements online suggesting he was going to livestream footage of ā€œan incidentā€ and posted footage pretending he had set fire to an Islamic centre.

The 24-year-old, from Glenrothes, Fife, also posted statements on social media platform Telegram and on Facebook which glorified terrorist acts by convicted terrorists Anders Breivik and Brenton Tarrant and others.

Imrie who had a photo of Hitler as his screensaver, also made offensive comments about the Muslim and Jewish communities, and uttered racial remarks, which the charge stated he did with the intention of encouraging acts of terrorism.

Sentencing Imrie at the High Court in Glasgow on Thursday, Lord Mulholland said he was ā€œspreading hateā€ and told him to use his time in jail to ā€œremove hatred from your heartā€.

Imrie also posted statements online suggesting he was going to livestream footage of ā€œan incidentā€ and posted footage pretending he had set fire to an Islamic centre.

Between June 20 and July 4, 2019, Imrie also had information of a kind ā€œlikely to be usefulā€ to someone preparing an act of terrorism, namely copies of The Great Replacement by Tarrant, who killed 51 people at two mosques in New Zealand in 2019, and a manifesto by Breivik, who killed 77 people in two separate attacks in Norway in 2011.

He was also convicted of possessing extreme pornography, including indecent images of children and an image involving a human corpse, and of setting fires and of driving while unfit through drink or drugs.

Lord Mulholland said that Imrie revered white supremacists and referred to terrorists as heroes, lauding their kill counts of innocent people.

He added: ā€œYou were spreading hate and encouraging others to take terrorist action.

ā€œYour conduct was despicable. You have no understanding or self awareness of the hate you sought to spread.

ā€œWalk around any city, town or village and you will quickly find memorials to people of this country who gave their lives defending the freedoms you enjoy.ā€

He said the actions of mass murderers such as Breivik and Tarrant are to be ā€œreviledā€ and added: ā€œYou should use your time in jail to reflect on your conduct and remove hatred from your heart.ā€

He also placed Imrie on the sex offenders register for ten years and imposed a five-year serious crime prevention order which will start on the day of his release.

Imrie will also be subject to terrorism notification requirements for 15 years.

During the trial, jurorsĀ heard that a laptop and phone were found in his bedroom with images of sexual activity with mutilated women in a folder named ā€œdead girl picsā€.

During the trial, the court heard that Imrie posted on far-right websites from his bedroom.

He became fascinated by the Nazis and set his screensaver as a photograph of Adolf Hitler addressing a Nuremberg rally.

The jury heard that Imrieā€™s computer password was N***** Killer and his bedroom wardrobe was adorned with swastikas.

The court heard that his mother Joyce Imrie had described her son as a ā€œlonerā€ and a ā€œrecluseā€.

In her statement to police on the day after her sonā€™s arrest, Ms Imrie said: ā€œI would describe him as a loner who very rarely leaves his room. He has no friends, no visitors to the house, no girlfriend that Iā€™m aware of.ā€

Jim Keegan QC, representing Imrie, said that the 24-year-old had showed a ā€œsubstantial lack of maturityā€.

He said: ā€œYour Lordship has heard the accused giving evidence and his own acknowledgment that his behaviour was inappropriate.ā€

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