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EDL leader Stephen Lennon jailed for false passport offence | EDL leader Stephen Lennon jailed for false passport offence |
(39 minutes later) | |
The leader of the English Defence League has been jailed for 10 months for using someone else's passport to travel to the USA. | The leader of the English Defence League has been jailed for 10 months for using someone else's passport to travel to the USA. |
Stephen Lennon, 30, from Luton, admitted possession of a false identity document with improper intention. | |
Lennon used a passport in the name of Andrew McMaster to board a Virgin Atlantic flight from Heathrow to New York, Southwark Crown Court was told. | Lennon used a passport in the name of Andrew McMaster to board a Virgin Atlantic flight from Heathrow to New York, Southwark Crown Court was told. |
He entered the US illegally then used his own passport to return to the UK. | He entered the US illegally then used his own passport to return to the UK. |
Lennon had previously been refused entry to the US and used a friend's passport to travel to the country in September. | |
He used a self check-in kiosk to board the flight at Heathrow and was allowed through when the document was checked in the bag-drop area. | |
But when Lennon arrived at New York's JFK Airport, customs officials took his fingerprints and realised he was not travelling on his own passport. | |
Lennon was asked to attend a second interview but managed to leave the airport, entering the US illegally. | |
Previous convictions | |
He stayed one night and travelled back to the UK the following day using his own legitimate passport, which bears the name of Paul Harris. | |
Judge Alistair McCreath told him: "I am going to sentence you under the name of Stephen Lennon although I suspect that is not actually your true name, in the sense that it is not the name that appears on your passport. | |
"What I have to deal with you for is clear enough. You knew perfectly well that you were not welcome in the United States. | |
"You knew that because you tried before and you had not got in, and you knew the reason for that - because, rightly or wrongly, the US authorities do not welcome people in their country who have convictions of the kind that you have. | |
"With that full knowledge, you equipped yourself with a passport. I am told that it was given you by way of a loan from your friend Andrew McMaster, to which you bore, I am told, some resemblance." | |
The judge added: "What you did went absolutely to the heart of the immigration controls that the United States are entitled to have. | |
"It's not in any sense trivial." | |
In mitigation, Lennon's barrister Giles Cockings told the court the passport was not stolen and his client had only used it for a day. | |
Lennon was jailed for assault in 2005 and also has convictions for drugs offences and public order offences, the court heard. |
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