A Neo-Nazi wrote his own ‘terrorist manifesto’ before stabbing an asylum seeker in the chest at a hotel. Callum Parslow, 32, who also had Adolf Hitler’s signature tattooed on his forearm, tried to send a post to X claiming he ‘just did my duty to England’ by trying to ‘exterminate’ his target. He was found guilty of attempted murder at Leicester Crown Court for attacking Nahom Hagos at the Pear Tree Inn at Hindlip, Worcestershire, with a ‘specialist’ blade he bought for £770 online. The white supremacist tried to claim he made the four-and-a-half-mile journey on April 2 to stab ‘one of the Channel migrants’ because he was ‘angry and frustrated’ at small boat crossings. The court heard that as police closed in, Parslow attempted to tweet his manifesto document. But it failed to send because he tagged too many people in it. They included Tommy Robinson and prominent politicians including Sir Keir Starmer, Rishi Sunak, Nigel Farage and Suella Braverman. (…) Prosecutor Tom Storey KC said it was clear the manifesto was intended for publication online as it ended with a list of X handles or tags, which also featured those of Ukip and news outlets including the BBC and GB News.
via metro: Neo-Nazi with Hitler tattoo wrote ‘manifesto’ before stabbing asylum seeker
siehe auch: Moment Nazi-obsessed knifeman arrested by police on Worcestershire canal path Callum Parslow, 32, from Worcester, was found guilty of attempted murder after stabbing an asylum seeker. This is the moment a Nazi-obsessed knifeman is arrested by police on a Worcestershire canal path. Callum Parslow, who has Adolf Hitler’s signature tattooed on his left forearm, stabbed an asylum seeker and had wanted to kill him after being evicted from his flat and leaving his job. The 32-year-old, who had written his own ‘terrorist manifesto’, knifed Nahom Hagos in the chest and hand at the Pear Tree Inn at Hindlip, Worcestershire, after buying a “specialist” £770 knife online. Police bodyworn camera footage showed Parslow being hauled to the ground by two police officers. Asked by an officer why he had so much money in his wallet following a check for ID, Parslow, from Worcester, replied: “That’s all the cash I’m going to take with me to prison.” He denied attempted murder, but was later found guilty of the charge yesterday, Friday, October 25. He also pleaded guilty minutes later to offences committed in July and August last year, including one of intentional exposure of his genitals in a video he sent from a Facebook account. (…) Details of the trial could not be reported until a court order was lifted on Friday after Parslow pleaded guilty to an unconnected sexual offence and two charges under the Malicious Communications Act. Jurors were told the manifesto found on the former supermarket worker’s mobile phone also stated: “They will call me a terrorist, they will call me an extremist: I am neither. Become the White man they say you are.” Some of the defendant’s tweets also advocated the use of extreme violence against immigrants entering Britain, with one stating: “Open the door with a knife in your hand and shout at them. If they attack you it’s fair game.”; How an English extremist with a Hitler tattoo hid in plain sight – and plotted to kill Callum Parslow’s extreme beliefs were known to police when he stabbed an Eritrean man, but what lay behind his journey from bedroom fanaticism to attempted murder. When neo-Nazi terrorist Callum Parslow walked into a countryside hotel on 2 April and stabbed an asylum seeker in the chest, it was not the first time he had come to the attention of the police. The 31-year-old computer programmer was on bail, having been arrested four months earlier for sending racist and sexual messages to a black female journalist. The mindset that drove his attack was clear. When police searched Parslow’s home in Worcester on 13 December, they found a stockpile of Nazi memorabilia, including rings and medallions from the Third Reich, two copies of Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf and numerous other far-right books. The items were scattered through his bedroom, which had a huge St George’s flag on the wall, 10 cans of cider on the desk and empty crisp packets and milk cartons on the floor. His laptop and phone contained further indication of his beliefs: countless videos, images and texts linked to neo-Nazi ideology, alongside evidence of his immersion in conspiracy theories ranging from white genocide to “exaggerated pandemics”. But Parslow remained free, and would tell his eventual trial, which concluded on Friday after three weeks, that his December 2023 arrest was the moment he started considering launching an attack. Last week, Parslow was found guilty of attempted murder and will be sentenced at a later date. Reporting restrictions have now been lifted and we are able to tell the full story of Parslow’s crime for the first time.