Millionaire mum accused of being first to spread false Southport asylum seeker claim says her life has been ‘destroyed’

A MILLIONAIRE mum accused of being the first person to spread a false claim that sparked riots across Britain says her life has been “destroyed”.

Bernadette Spofforth wrongly claimed the Southport attack suspect was an asylum seeker who had arrived in Britain by boat last year.

Bernadette Spofforth is accused of being the first person to spread a false claim

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Bernadette Spofforth is accused of being the first person to spread a false claimCredit: Facebook
The millionaire mum says her life has been 'destroyed'

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The millionaire mum says her life has been ‘destroyed’Credit: Facebook

She posted the false claim on Twitter just hours after three girls were killed at a Taylor Swift dance class in the Merseyside town last week.

Before the victims had even been named, Spofforth tweeted: “Ali Al-Shakati was the suspect.

“He was an asylum seeker who came to the UK by boat last year and was on an MI6 watch list.”

Spofforth, 55, added: “If this is true, then all hell is about to break loose.”

The claim was flatly untrue – the suspect was not called Ali Al-Shakati, and he was not an asylum seeker or a recent arrival to the UK.

Cops have charged UK-born teen Axel Rudakubana with the murders of Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice Dasilva Aguiar.

Rudakubana, 18, has also been charged with 10 counts of attempted murder and possession of a bladed article.

The teen suspect was born in Cardiff to Rwandan parents who arrived legally in the UK in 2002.

Mum-of-three Spofforth’s false claim spread rapidly on social media, where it was allegedly boosted by Russian trolls.

It was also shared by far-right agitators like Tommy Robinson and Andrew Tate.

The fake news about the Southport suspect sparked a week of far-right riots across the UK.

Fashion company boss Spofforth lives with her family in a £1.5million farmhouse in Cheshire.

Last night she told the Mail: “I’m mortified that I’m being accused of this.

“I did not make it up. I first received this information from somebody in Southport.

“My post had nothing to do with the violence we’ve seen across the country.

“But I acknowledge that it may have been the source for the information used by a Russian news website.”

Spofforth has not produced any evidence to support her claim that she received the fake news from someone in Southport.

She claimed she saw someone else post the false name Ali Al-Shakati – but could not provide evidence for this claim either.

Spofforth is a prominent conspiracy theorist who has campaigned against lockdowns, vaccinations and climate change policies.

The millionaire mum had tens of thousands of Twitter followers before she deleted her account.

She previously told The Times: “It was a spur of the moment ridiculous thing to do, which has literally destroyed me.

“It was just a mistake. I did a really stupid stupid thing, I copied and pasted it from what I saw, and I added the line ‘if this is true.’

“I think it is very easy for a situation which is very emotional and very heightened, so you can end up believing what you’re seeing.

“People should be very careful about putting what they think is true without doing the research.”

It comes as dawn raids were launched this morning to arrest suspected violent offenders.

Cops have released CCTV images in a bid to hunt down dozens of thugs involved in riots.

Met chief Sir Mark Rowley said his force had smashed its way into the homes of the “most violent” members of last week’s riots.

The biggest police mobilisation in UK history rolled on to the streets last night to combat planned carnage at 100 sites by far-right thugs.

But The Sun has revealed yobs are planning 11 MORE riots in secret Facebook groups so cops’ “can’t catch on” after a week of chaos.

Murdered MP Jo Cox’s widower Brendan Cox has warned we must take drastic action to hold the Wild West of social media to account.

Britain’s top prosecutor said rioting yobs could face terror charges over the carnage.

More than 400 people have now been arrested over the week of carnage on England and Northern Ireland’s streets.

Suspects have already been convicted for offences including violent disorder and affray.