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Web racists await possible extradition

April 2, 2009 10:07

ByLeon Symons, Leon Symons

1 min read

The fate of two racists who were the first people in Britain to be convicted of publishing racially inflammatory material on the internet still hangs in the balance.

Simon Sheppard and Steve Whittle fled to America in the middle of their trial at Leeds Crown Court. They will know within the next three weeks whether or not an asylum court judge will return them to Britain. However, the pair have already said they will appeal if the decision goes against them. That process could involve appeals to two higher American courts and could take months before a final decision is reached.

Sheppard, 51, from Selby, Yorkshire, and Whittle, 42, of Preston, Lancs, were on trial last July, facing charges of inciting racial hatred against Jews and other ethnic groups using the internet. The jury had returned 11 out of 18 verdicts of guilty when the men fled to America and claimed political asylum on arrival in Los Angeles. They have been held in prison in the town of Santa Ana, California, since then.

They claimed they had been the victims of a “three-year campaign of legal harassment” by the British government.