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Anti-vax conspiracy theorist called for kill squad to shoot those involved in rollout, court told

Patrick Ruane is accused of encouraging terrorism through the use of weapons, guns and explosions

Emily Pennink
Tuesday 03 September 2024 04:26 EDT
A conspiracy theorist issued a rallying call on Telegram for a ā€˜kill squadā€™ to shoot people involved in the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, a court has heard (Danny Lawson/PA)
A conspiracy theorist issued a rallying call on Telegram for a ā€˜kill squadā€™ to shoot people involved in the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, a court has heard (Danny Lawson/PA) (PA Archive)

A conspiracy theorist issued a rallying call on Telegram for a ā€œkill squadā€ to shoot people involved in the Covid-19 vaccine rollout and burn ā€œBig Pharmaā€ to the ground, a court has heard.

Patrick Ruane, 55, is on trial at the Old Bailey accused of encouraging terrorism through the use of weapons, guns and explosions in a series of posts on the encrypted app during the pandemic.

He also had a manual entitled ā€œAnon-How to make a jolly rogerā€ which included viable instructions on making Semtex, it is alleged.

Opening his trial on Monday, Julia Faure Walker said Ruane was ā€œangry, frustrated and upsetā€ about lockdown policies and the vaccine rollout when he posted messages to thousands of Telegram users in 2021.

He believed conspiracy theories about a ā€œhidden agendaā€ and was particularly focused on manufacturers of the Covid vaccine and those who administered jabs, she said.

In one post, Ruane allegedly wrote: ā€œIā€™m all for hunting them down andĀ  f***ing executing them where they stand as too many people have f***ing died and itā€™s not going to stop until we start killing them back.ā€

When someone posted about not allowing a ā€œsatanist puppetā€ to come near his children with ā€œthat poison jab kill shotsā€, the defendant allegedly encouraged others to ā€œfind where they live put a kill squad together and shootā€ them in their beds.

Patrick Ruane, 55, is on trial at the Old Bailey
Patrick Ruane, 55, is on trial at the Old Bailey (PA Archive)

In response to another post, he allegedly advocated burning ā€œall the big pharmas offices manufacturing plants and infrastructureā€ to the ground.

The court heard Ruane referred to executing politicians, saying the manufacture of ammunition for sniper weapons ā€œcould end corrupt politicians and Davos scum in one shotā€.

Ruane, an audio producer who worked in films, posted images of Semtex and when asked about delivery, wrote: ā€œWhy deliver when you can make it yourself,ā€ jurors were told.

He allegedly called for an ā€œIRA play bookā€ to be implemented after the then-prime minister Boris Johnson extended powers for a further period.

The defendant also allegedly suggested destroying 5G communications, saying in one post: ā€œ5g towers are easy, Semtex, easy to make recipies (sic) on the www.ā€

Ms Faure Walker told jurors that the posts spanned many months and encouraged serious violence and disruption designed to influence the government or intimidate a section of the public.

Ruaneā€™s posts reached a ā€œvery large audienceā€ via two Telegraph chat groups, one of which had 18,000 users and the other with 8,000, she told jurors.

She suggested some of those who viewed messages could ā€œhave a range of susceptibilitiesā€, adding the posts could have spread more widely by being forwarded on by others.

On the defendantā€™s motivation, she said: ā€œHe was vehemently against the measures brought in by the then-government in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, including the lockdown and vaccination rollout.

ā€œIt was this ideological cause that drove the messages.

ā€œWhatever your personal viewpoint, there is nothing illegal in merely holding views or campaigning to bring about change.

ā€œWhat brings Mr Ruane here, facing terrorism charges, is that rather than restricting himself to advocating change through argument or protest for example, he repeatedly referred to serious violence, even referring to the use of Semtex, as well as serious criminal damage and disruption of electronic communication systems.ā€

She added: ā€œThere were not just one or two posts. There were repeated references to violence, in various forms, including explosions and by using firearms and other weapons.

ā€œIt is not the case, therefore, that it was a single off the cuff remark, but rather many posts, over many months.ā€

The defendantā€™s electronic devices were seized when police attended his flat in November 2021.

In police interview, he referred to making ā€œpropsā€ for a film, but did not elaborate on why he needed instructions for the explosives for that.

He told police he had lost his business during the last lockdown and was drinking a lot.

Ms Faure Walker suggested a potential issue was whether he was using alcohol as an excuse to deny responsibility for his actions.

Ruane, of Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, west London, has denied two counts of encouraging terrorism and one charge of collecting information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism.

The Old Bailey trial continues.

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