The neo-Nazi student carved a Nazi logo on his girlfriend’s ass and will be sentenced for his leadership role in a far-right group.
Andrew Dymock, a 24-year-old middle-class scholar who was convicted of 15 counts in June, including 12 crimes related to terrorism, said to the jurors “Thank you for killing me.”
He will be judged by Judge Mark Dennis QC in Old Bailey on Wednesday.
The court was informed that Dymock promoted the now banned System Resistance Network (SRN) organization, which aims to “provoke a race war” and passed Twitter Account and website.
He used an online platform to raise funds for the organization, which “proclaims zero tolerance” to non-whites, Jewish with Muslim The community described homosexuality as a “disease.”
Damok was studying politics at Aberystwyth University in Wales. He denied participating in these accounts, claiming that he was set up by his ex-girlfriend, who failed to recruit him to join a banned terrorist organization. National action (not applicable).
The police found a photo on a device in Dymock that showed the woman with a swastika character on her hip. He told detectives in an interview in January 2019 that he had struck this symbol with his nails.
Dymock’s computer showed his long-standing extremist views at the age of 17, including the Google Translate of “Kill all Jews.”
The court learned that SRN was one of the few groups that filled the “suspicious gap” left by the banning of the far-right group National Action, which itself was banned in 2020.
On October 8, 2017, Dymock wrote about the creation of SRN on the right-wing webpage, stating that the organization “focuses on building a group of loyal people who are loyal to the cause of national socialism and establish a fascist state through revolution”.
Dymock was expelled from SRN in late February 2018 and was arrested four months ago while trying to board a flight to the United States at Gatwick Airport.
The police found far-right literature in his luggage, including “Siege” and “Mein Kampf” written by James Mason and “Mein Kampf” And clothes with neo-Nazi emblems.
He also has books, flags, clothes and badges related to the far right in his home and university bedrooms.
Dymock claimed that the material that linked him to content on the SRN website and Twitter account was “planted without his knowledge.”
He denied that he was a neo-Nazi and told the police: “In fact, I am bisexual, but I tend to be homosexual, which directly conflicts with Nazism.”
He went on to tell the jurors that he had Adolf Hitler’s autobiographical manifesto — and books on Satanism — to “study” right-wing populism.
The jury found Dymock guilty of five counts of encouraging terrorism, two counts of fundraising for terrorism, four counts of disseminating terrorist publications, possessing terrorist documents, inciting racial hatred and hatred based on sexual orientation, and possessing racial seditiousness The charge of the material.
Dymock was supported by his parents Stella and Dr. David Dymock throughout the trial. He is a professor of dentistry at the University of Bristol and lives with him in Bath, Somerset.
In previous email chats, Dr. Damok tried to distance himself from his son’s point of view, telling him not to send “any of your political content to my work email account because I work in a multicultural organization. I am proud to do so and believe in the values of the organization.
“I hate that people who see my email think I sympathize with fascist views in any way.”



