Jonathon Best, 52, posted an 18-second video on Facebook in
which he made a “grossly offensive” rant about the players following England’s
penalty shootout loss to Italy in July’s match at Wembley.
He was sentenced at Willesden Magistrates’ Court in London
on Tuesday after previously pleading guilty to “sending by public communication
network a grossly offensive or indecent or obscene or menacing message or
matter”.
Rashford, Sancho and Saka, who are all black, received a
torrent of online abuse after failing to score their penalties as England
failed to win their first trophy since the 1966 World Cup.
The judge, Denis Brennan, said he had considered a suspended
sentence but decided to impose a custodial one to deter others.
“The words you used were antediluvian, vile, and offensive —
they strike at the very nature of our civilised society and are corrosive,”
said Brennan in sentencing him.
Best, a forklift driver from London, was reported to
Facebook and the police by a colleague and Facebook friend after refusing to
remove his post.
“When approached by a Facebook friend asking him to remove
the grossly offensive content, Best replied: ‘It’s my profile, I can do what I
want.’,” said prosecutor Elaine Cousins.
“There is absolutely no room in the game, nor elsewhere, for
racism. I hope this prosecution goes some way in educating and deterring people
from posting hate on social media.”
In August, British police arrested 11 people over racist
social media posts following the Euro 2020 final.
Social media giants including Facebook and Twitter came
under pressure from political and sporting leaders to clamp down on racist
abuse on their platforms.
The showpiece event in London was also marred by violence
and crowd disorder as ticketless fans forcibly entered Wembley stadium and
clashed with security staff.
England players suffered racial abuse during a 2022 World
Cup qualifier in Hungary in September.
Football’s global governing body FIFA subsequently ordered
Hungary to play two home games in FIFA competitions behind closed doors — with
one of those suspended — and fined 200,000 Swiss francs ($219,000).
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