🔴 Lucy Connolly Freed 10 Months After Being Sentenced
🔴 LUCY CONNOLLY FREED
Lucy Connolly has been released from prison after serving 40% of her 31 month sentence (10 months post sentencing plus 10 weeks on remand). She was jailed after pleading guilty to inciting racial hatred after she posted an inflammatory tweet.
Lucy Connolly, the former childminder jailed inciting racial hatred in the wake of the Southport terror attack, walked free from prison this morning.
Connolly, 42, the wife of former Northamptonshire Conservative councillor Raymond Connolly, was released from HMP Peterborough after serving a total of 12 months (including two months on remand) of her 31-month sentence.
Shortly before 10.30am, she emerged from the jail’s gates and climbed straight into a waiting white taxi, ignoring a group of reporters gathered outside.
The Northampton woman was jailed last October after admitting a charge of publishing written material with intent to stir up racial hatred. Birmingham Crown Court heard how, just hours after three young girls were stabbed to death in Southport in July 2024, she posted an expletive-laden message on X.
In the post, she demanded “mass deportation now” and called on others to “set fire” to hotels housing asylum seekers.
Prosecutors said her words were designed to inflame tensions in a community already in shock after the tragedy. Connolly later pleaded guilty, telling the court she regretted her actions.
The judge at sentencing described her comments as “dangerous, reckless and deliberately provocative,” adding that they had the potential to encourage violence against vulnerable groups.
Connolly, who previously worked as a childminder, was handed a two-and-a-half-year prison term. She has now been freed after serving a year in custody.
Her husband Raymond remains an elected Conservative councillor on Northampton Town Council. He did not attend her release today.
The Case & Controversy in Full
Lucy Connolly has been one of the most commented upon prisoners in recent times.
Here are the facts of how Connolly’s case unfolded and why it became so divisive.
The Tweet
Connolly was prosecuted over a social media post made hours after three young girls were killed in Southport last July. In a message on X, she wrote:
“Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f*ing hotels full of the bastards for all I care, while you’re at it take the treacherous government & politicians with them. I feel physically sick knowing what these families will now have to endure. If that makes me racist, so be it.”
She later deleted the post and admitted it was “wrong.
The Law
In October 2024 she was sentenced at Birmingham Crown Court after pleading guilty to publishing written material with intent to stir up racial hatred under Section 18 of the Public Order Act 1986.
The offence has been on the statute book for nearly 40 years and is treated as a serious crime under English law. Sentencing guidelines set by the Sentencing Council indicate prison terms ranging from one to three years are common, with immediate custody the norm.
The judge described Connolly’s words as “dangerous, reckless and deliberately provocative,” warning they risked fuelling violence against minority groups. Her guilty plea, expression of remorse and the deletion of the post within hours were considered as mitigation.
Sentencing Row
Connolly’s 31-month sentence drew sharp political criticism and became a touchstone in the wider debate on “two-tier justice.” Supporters argued that offenders convicted of burglary, rioting and even sexual offences often receive lesser terms.
Her husband Raymond said: “Lucy got more time in jail for one tweet than some paedophiles and domestic abusers get. I think the system wanted to make an example of Lucy so other people would be scared to say things about immigration.”
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch attacked the decision to prosecute, writing on X: “Protecting people from words should not be given greater weight in law than public safety. If the law does this, then the law itself is broken – and it’s time Parliament looked again at the Public Order Act.”
Former Reform MP Rupert Lowe described Connolly as a “political prisoner,” while critics of Labour said Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer pushed for “fast-track prosecutions” in the days after the Southport unrest.
Starmer’s Defence
Starmer defended the sentence earlier this year, telling MPs that Connolly’s comments “crossed a dangerous line” and that the courts had applied the law correctly. In May her Court of Appeal challenge against the jail term was rejected.
International Reaction
Connolly’s case also drew attention in the United States. The US State Department said it was “monitoring” the matter due to concerns over free speech. Conservative commentator Charlie Kirk called the sentence “outrageous,” accusing Britain of “becoming a totalitarian country.”
Failed Appeal
Connolly’s lawyers took her case to the Court of Appeal earlier this year, arguing that her sentence was excessive. In May, senior judges dismissed the challenge, ruling that the 31-month term was “not manifestly excessive” and had been properly imposed in line with sentencing guidelines.
How Her Family Coped – and the £160k Backing from Supporters
Connolly’s husband Raymond said the couple had “coped relatively well” with her time in custody, but their 12-year-old daughter had “found it very difficult not having her mum at home.”
“The 284 days of separation have been very hard,” he said. “The only person who hasn’t coped is our daughter. She has found it very difficult. Now we just want to get our lives back on track.”
During Connolly’s imprisonment, supporters launched an online fundraiser to “help her rebuild her life.” It drew more than £160,000 in donations — the equivalent of around £13,000 for every month she spent behind bars .
Release and Return Home
Under standard release rules, Connolly served 40% of her sentence before being freed automatically. The ten weeks she spent on remand before sentencing counted towards that period — it was not an additional punishment.
Her husband said their 12-year-old daughter had “found it very difficult not having her mum at home,” while he tried to prepare the family home for her return. “The 284 days of separation have been very hard,” he said. “Now we just want to get our lives back on track.”
Connolly, who worked as a childminder before her conviction, made no comment on her release.
Well, that’s all for now. But until our next article, please stay tuned, stay informed, but most of all stay safe, and I’ll see you then.