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The girl in the UK accused of terrorism had “obsession with Hitler, neo-Nazi” | World News

The girl in the UK accused of terrorism had “obsession with Hitler, neo-Nazi” | World News

A teenager who believed to have taken his own life after being accused of terrorism offenses had an “obsession with Hitler” and wanted to “throw” a Jewish place of worship after being cared for by an extremist, heard an investigation.

The girl became the youngest person who was accused of terror offenses in the UK (Pixabay/Representative)
The girl became the youngest person who was accused of terror offenses in the UK (Pixabay/Representative)

The courtyard of Chesterfield Corner was told that Rhianan Rudd, 16, when he died, was a victim of care by a “neo-Nazi” and was investigated after downloading a bomb manufacturing manual and scratched a swastika brand.

The chief judge of the coroner Alexia Durran told the investigation that Rhianan, in Chesterfield, died on May 19, 2022 at Bluebell House House in Nottinghamshire, when she was found with a ligature around her neck.

She became the youngest person who was accused of terror offenses in the UK, but her accusations were abandoned five months before her death, when evidence was exploited.

The investigation heard Rhianan, who was a cared child in the care of his local authority at the time of his death, had autism and self-given because he had “too many emotions” and “did not know how to deal with them.”

In an e-mail from September 7, 2020, said Rhianan’s mother Emily Carter, a program to combat terrorism from the home office, that her daughter had a “massive inconvenience for certain races,” said the counselor of the investigation Edward Pletoth.

During an evaluation that month, it was registered that Rhianan had an “obsession with Hitler”, about which the court heard that he has an altar in her bedroom and was a “Holocaust denial”.

The court said that the messages sent on WhatsApp de Rhianan have been detailed in a statement of incident of the students of September 2020, saying that “he wants to kill someone in school or to explode a Jewish place” and that “he does not care who kills and nothing matters.”

The messages were “considered to be suggestive for a violent and right -wing ideological mentality” by the police, a malicious communication crime report was filed and was considered “adequate” to try to obtain evidence, rather than arrest Rhianan. The superintendent Stephen Riley, the head of the Terrorism Terrorism East Midlands (CTPEM), told the court that two police officers participated in Rhianan’s home address on October 9, 2020, before confiscating a USB memory stick and a journal from it.

The PDF files were recovered in connection with the manufacture of bombs, the guerrilla war and homemade weapons, and its journal referred to firearms, heard the investigation. In October 2020, CTPEM shared information with MI5, which then opened an investigation into the Rhianan, said Mr. Pleteth.

The court said that, on October 20, 2020, during a hearing, the police decided that Rhianan would not be arrested, because “it was believed to risk an impact on his mental health” and “could lead to an additional auto attempt and suicide.”

However, after Rhianan was admitted to the hospital the same day after scratching a swastika on his forehead, the court said that a decision was made the next day, on October 21, to arrest him.

Also, the court was said that Rhianan spoke with an American extremist, described in court as a “neo-Nazi”, who “encouraged her to read a few books” about Jewish and black people, the investigation was told. In September 2020 he was registered that he said he had stopped talking to the extremist in March, but then “seemed to be contradicted”, which means it was possible to communicate, the court heard.

Some of Rhianan’s drawings included a person who gives a Nazi greeting and another man with a knife that looked “as if to stab the other man,” the investigation heard. A pen portrait read on behalf of Rhianan’s mother said that her daughter will be “fixed” on things, which is “normal” for people with autism.

The statement said: “My daughter being cared for was huge and I saw that Rhianan is changing. This had a big impact on her and I did everything I thought was right. “He was one of the most kind and beloved children I have ever had the honor to know. People told me how wonderful it was. “I miss her more than life itself, I miss her smile, her laughter, her conversations -I just lack.” Mrs. Carter wrote that Rhianan was born in a relationship of domestic violence, but she was “non -public” and “unique in everything she did.”

Mr. PLEETH told the court that Rhianan’s accusations were interrupted on December 29, 2021. Judge Durran told the court that the scope of the investigation includes the way the risk of self-injury and suicide was acted, including the circumstances that led his accusations and how his care and support were coordinated. The investigation continues.