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Jonty Bravery given extra sentence after Tate Modern and Broadmoor incidents
Summary
Jonty Bravery, who carried out the 2019 Tate Modern attack and is detained at Broadmoor, has been given an additional 16-week sentence after being found guilty of assaulting two nurses; he remains under continuous observation.
Content
Jonty Bravery has been given an additional custodial term after a recent trial in which he was found guilty of assaulting two nurses at Broadmoor high-security hospital. He remains detained following his earlier conviction for the 2019 Tate Modern attack, in which a child was thrown and survived. At the earlier trial he received a life sentence with a minimum 15-year term. Court reporting states he is subject to continual supervision while held in secure conditions.
Known details:
- He was handed a further 16-week sentence after being convicted of assaulting two Broadmoor nurses.
- He remains detained at Broadmoor and is reported to be monitored by three staff members around the clock and kept in a room with a mattress.
- He was previously convicted for the August 2019 Tate Modern attack; the child survived, and Bravery received a life sentence with a minimum 15-year term at that trial.
- Accounts of the Broadmoor incident were set out to the court during the recent trial.
Summary:
Bravery received an additional 16-week sentence for assaults on staff and remains in secure detention under continuous observation; he was already serving a life term for the 2019 Tate Modern attack. Undetermined at this time.
