A London court has banned a Manchester United supporter from the stadium for four years after he wore a Red Devils shirt with an inscription mocking the Hillsborough disaster in the FA Cup final. The Mancunian club even went further than justice, banning him for life from any activity organized by the club.
He was arrested after the match between Manchester United and Manchester City at Wembley on June 3. The jersey bore the number 97, like the number of supporters of Liverpool – historic rival club Manchester United – who died in crowd movements in 1989, in the Hillsborough stadium in Sheffield (north), and flocked “Not Enough” (” not enough”).
Photos of the man and his jersey were immediately posted on social media and reported to the police for him to be found.
To the police, James White, 33, initially explained that it was an allusion to his grandfather who died at 97 and who had not had enough children. In court in Willesden, north-west London, however, he pleaded guilty to wearing “a threatening or insulting inscription which is likely to constitute harassment or cause fear or distress”.
White will not be able to attend any official football match for four years and will have to pay nearly 1,500 pounds (1,750 euros) in fines and court costs. Manchester United have announced that White will be banned for life from any club-sponsored activities, including matches at Old Trafford, calling his attitude “despicable”.
“Making fun of Hillsborough or any other footballing tragedy is completely unacceptable and the club will continue to support determined action to eradicate them from sport,” the Red Devils, who are themselves often targeted by insulting allusions to the Munich air disaster in 1958.
The defendant’s defense had assured that he “deeply regretted” his actions and that he admitted to having “deeply hurt people”. But White, already convicted on numerous occasions for acts unrelated to football, sneered when the judgment was delivered, reported the British agency PA.
Last Tuesday it was a Tottenham fan who was banned from the stadium for three years after being mocked by gesture at the Hillsborough disaster during a game at Anfield Road on April 30.