A Staffordshire father, Kyle Taft, 34, was jailed for five years after admitting his role in attacking a Tamworth hotel that housed asylum seekers during rioting on August 4, 2024. Sentencing took place at Stafford Crown Court on October 23, 2025, where judges heard that Taft acted as a leading participant, used a loudhailer to urge others to storm the building, and helped set the hotel ablaze by throwing a smoking object inside.
The site was a Holiday Inn used as temporary accommodation for people seeking asylum, and it became a flashpoint in a night of violent disorder.

The incident and immediate courtroom findings
Crown prosecutors described a fast-moving riot that forced police to form lines to defend the hotel while bottles and stones rained down on them. Video evidence showed Taft among the most active figures, contradicting his early claim that he had only gone to watch.
Officers were seen withdrawing and regrouping under constant pressure as sections of the crowd aimed missiles at windows and entrances. The court was told that the hotel’s ground floor area caught fire during the attack, with smoke and flames pushing out into the night as officers and staff tried to secure a safe exit for those inside.
Footage from police units and nearby surveillance put Taft at the heart of the disorder for extended periods. Prosecutors said he moved between groups, amplified calls to break in, and threw objects toward the building. Investigators noted his actions occurred alongside multiple others in the crowd, creating what police later described as an intense and coordinated push at the hotel doors, followed by repeated volleys of bottles and other objects. The setting of a blaze escalated the danger to residents and responders.
Wider context: unrest, misinformation and targeting of asylum accommodation
The Tamworth violence took place amid a broader wave of unrest across the UK in 2024 and 2025. That turmoil followed the murder of children in Southport, where false online claims that the suspect was an asylum seeker spread widely.
Key contributors to the wider unrest:
– Misinformation: False claims after the Southport murders helped frame asylum seekers as suspects, despite no link.
– Far-right groups: Some organised or inflamed protests, turning local scenes more confrontational.
– Local tensions: Protests in some towns slid quickly toward confrontation and, in cases like Tamworth, outright attacks on hotels used for asylum accommodation.
These dynamics meant that hotels used for temporary housing often became targets not because of residents’ actions, but because of stories and rumours amplified online.
Policy and legal context
Taft pleaded guilty to rioting and using unlawful violence. The charge of “rioting” is a serious public order offense in the UK, and judges treat it as a major threat to public safety when groups target people or property.
- Readers can review the statutory definition at the UK government’s legislation website: Public Order Act 1986, Section 1.
The timeline presented in court:
1. August 4, 2024 — the offence occurred.
2. Charges were brought subsequently.
3. October 23, 2025 — Taft pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years in prison.
In imposing the sentence, the court pointed to:
– The serious harm risked to residents, hotel staff, and police.
– The aggravating factor of arson/attempted arson inside a building where people were living.
The central message from the court: organized, violent disorder at asylum accommodation crosses a bright line and will attract significant punishment.
Human impact
Survivors and staff faced immediate disruption and fear. Front desk and housekeeping staff had to act quickly to move residents away from smoke and danger. Parents with young children — already in temporary accommodation while asylum claims were processed — were forced to evacuate into the night.
These scenes reflect the real human cost:
– Broken glass, scorched walls and evacuated families.
– Heightened anxiety among people already coping with uncertain futures and limited support networks.
– Strain on staff tasked with protecting residents during chaotic and dangerous conditions.
Investigation evidence and its significance
Police footage and fixed cameras proved decisive in this case. Video allowed investigators to:
– Track movements and identify individuals carrying loudhailers or throwing objects.
– Piece together the sequence that led to the blaze.
– Undermine Taft’s claim he was merely a bystander.
This demonstrates a broader point: in public order cases, recordings can separate those who watched from those who actively pushed, threw, or directed violence.
Community impact and next steps
The Tamworth case sits within a pattern described by police and officials in 2024–2025: local protests that began as gatherings but turned into intimidation and assaults on asylum housing.
Consequences and observations:
– Repeated protests targeting asylum accommodation created a climate of fear for migrants and staff and placed added strain on local policing (analysis referenced from VisaVerge.com).
– Once a fire started, emergency responders had to split efforts between crowd control, protecting entry points, and assisting evacuations.
– The physical fallout — burn damage, smashed windows, and shaken families — became a lasting reminder of the night.
From a legal and community perspective:
– The five-year sentence illustrates courts’ emphasis on protecting people in asylum housing and those caring for them.
– The conviction will likely be cited in future hearings involving hotel attacks during 2024–2025, reinforcing that such incidents are treated as attacks on safety, not merely property damage.
For asylum seekers, the recurring message is stark: public anger and misinformation can reach their doorstep without warning, making temporary accommodation sites vulnerable targets.
Final note
This Stafford Crown Court outcome places a clear marker: group violence at sites housing vulnerable people, especially where arson is involved, will attract significant penalties. The case underscores the combined role of misinformation, organised groups, and crowd dynamics in turning local tensions into life‑threatening events.
This Article in a Nutshell
On October 23, 2025, Stafford Crown Court sentenced Kyle Taft, 34, to five years’ imprisonment after he admitted participating in the violent August 4, 2024 attack on a Tamworth Holiday Inn housing asylum seekers. Prosecutors presented video and surveillance evidence showing Taft among the most active participants; he used a loudhailer to encourage others to storm the building and threw a smoking object that initiated a fire. The riot forced police into defensive lines as projectiles struck officers and the hotel. The case sits within wider 2024–2025 unrest fueled by misinformation and far-right activity targeting asylum accommodation. The court emphasized the serious harm risked to residents and staff and signalled strong sentences for organised violence against vulnerable people.