Reflections on empathy and responsibility

Episode Summary

12 Months in Peterborough Prison for One Deleted Post Lucy Connolly is a mother and childminder from Northampton. On the evening of the Southport murders in July 2024, she fired off an angry tweet, regretted it within hours, and deleted it. A week later, two police officers knocked on her door. Twelve and a half months later, she finally walked out of HMP Peterborough. Timothy Allen sits down with Lucy for a conversation about what happens when an ordinary mother becomes a national headline, the deleted tweet, the dawn raid, the magistrate's court video link, the women she met inside, the husband she came home to, and the country that locked her up while telling itself it still had free speech. Lucy is on license until March 2027, which means she has to watch every word she says, including in this conversation. She's not bitter. She's funnier than she has any right to be. And she has a lot to say about what Britain has quietly become. In this conversation: The Southport murders, the deleted tweet, and the week between writing it and the police arriving at the door Why Lucy is convinced her arrest was a political takedown of her husband, a Conservative councillor Section 19 of the Public Order Act 1986 — and why a tweet became a 31-month prison sentence HMP Peterborough, run by Sodexo, and how a private prison compares to the state-run HMP Drake Hall The women she met inside, including Virginia McCullough, who murdered her parents and lived with their bodies for four years The case of Peter Lynch, the grandfather who died at HMP Moorland after being jailed for the Southport disorder Ricky Jones, the Labour councillor who called for protesters' throats to be cut and walked free Why the police, in Lucy's view, have become politically captured and why serving officers are leaving in disgust Free speech, the First Amendment, and whether Britain has a way back Why she's not bitter, and why the worst thing that could happen to her had already happened years before Enjoy the conversation. Timestamps (audio version, includes Timothy's episode introduction): 0:00:30 - Introduction to episode 0:07:26 - Start of conversation 0:09:18 - The night of the Southport murders and the tweet 0:11:00 - What the tweet actually said, and how the media doctored it 0:13:50 - Why Lucy believes this was a political takedown of her Conservative councillor husband 0:17:30 - The first knock at the door, and the first arrest 0:20:46 - Section 19 of the Public Order Act 1986 0:23:30 - Released on bail, then re-arrested four days later 0:24:40 - Mr Khan, the complainant, and the second batch of tweets 0:27:30 - Charged, refused bail, video link to Crown Court 0:30:00 - Why Lucy refuses to accept her tweet was incitement 0:30:50 - Straight to HMP Peterborough and 12.4 months without going home 0:32:00 - The judge who said he didn't care about mitigation 0:36:00 - What prison is actually like, once you settle in 0:39:46 - HMP Peterborough (Sodexo) vs. HMP Drake Hall, why the private one was better 0:41:43 - Virginia McCullough, the woman who tried to buy Lucy's leggings 0:43:46 - "Pussy politics" and the unspoken rules of women's prison 0:46:13 - How prison changed her view of who actually ends up inside 0:48:21 - Was anyone actually radicalised by tweets? Or were the rioters always going to riot? 0:50:38 - Why Keir Starmer's response made it worse 0:53:23 - Authoritarianism, COVID, and the long shadow of 2020 0:55:39 - Real-world support vs. social media hate and the messages from prison 0:57:15 - Free speech, the First Amendment, and the Americans watching Britain in disbelief
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