Neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell freed on bail over alleged Camp Sovereignty attack

Sewell was met with jeers after he was bailed from court on Thursday, more than two months after he allegedly led a group attack on Camp Sovereignty.

A white bald man with a moustache and wearing a black jumper walks down a city street. Reporters holding microphones and phones follow him.

It was Sewell's second attempt at bail after a Melbourne magistrate denied his release. Source: AAP / James Ross

A chorus of "Nazi scum, off our streets" has been shouted by protesters as a white supremacist leader walked from court after securing bail.

Thomas Sewell, 32, was granted bail by a judge on Thursday after he was found not to be an unacceptable risk to endangering community safety and had presented compelling reasons to be freed.

It was his second attempt at bail after a Melbourne magistrate denied his release about two months ago.

Sewell is charged with 25 offences for two incidents in August, including allegedly leading a group attack on 31 August on a sacred First Nations site where several people were assaulted.

He is accused of punching a member of Camp Sovereignty in the collar bone, kicking another occupant and discharging a missile at the camp.
Sewell is further accused of raising his fists and lunging at a man on 9 August as he and 200 others marched through Melbourne with "white man fight back" banners.

The man allegedly spat on Sewell, who is accused of retaliating and trading blows before overpowering the man who was tackled by other members of Sewell's group and kicked in the head.

Bail opposed by prosecution

Prosecutors opposed Sewell's release in Melbourne's Supreme Court, citing his unacceptable risk of re-offending as the leader of a group with a "history of hate crimes and acts of violence".
A group of men dressed in black lash out at people at Camp Sovereignty in Melbourne (AAP)
Sewell is accused of a leading a group attack on Camp Sovereignty in Melbourne in August. Source: AAP / PR IMAGE
Sewell's group, the National Socialist Network, tended to "act violently to vulnerable groups, including ethnic minorities", prosecutors said.

Prosecutor Erik Dober said Sewell's offending was serious as he told a group of about 30 men dressed in black, "let's get 'em" and led them towards the camp at King's Domain, a sacred site for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.
He said Sewell had failed to show compelling reasons under the Bail Act to allow his release.

Sewell's barrister, top silk Dermot Dann KC, listed a number of reasons his client should be freed on bail, including that any risk to the community could be addressed with bail conditions.

Dann said if Sewell remained locked up until he faced trial, which could take two years, he may end up serving more time on remand than he his sentenced to.

Justice James Elliott agreed with the defence as he approved Sewell's release, finding the prosecution did not demonstrate he posed an unacceptable risk to endangering the safety of the community.

Sewell, who had spent 72 days in custody, was bailed on a $20,000 surety, which his partner will have to forfeit if he breaches any bail conditions.
He will have to abide by an 18-month community correction order, which was handed to him by a magistrate in September after she found him guilty of intimidating a police officer and his wife.

Sewell will be restricted to a curfew from 9pm to 6am every day, must not contact any co-accused or witnesses for the prosecution, and cannot enter Melbourne's CBD except for legal or medical reasons.

He is banned from going within 200 metres of King's Domain and cannot leave Victoria.

Among his reasons for granting bail, the judge said Sewell had stable accommodation with his fiancée and two children, and faced "extremely onerous conditions" in protection while on remand.

As Sewell walked from court on Thursday afternoon, a small group of pro-immigration protesters chanted "Nazi scum off our streets".

Sewell will return to Melbourne Magistrates Court next month.


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Source: AAP


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