Lucy Connolly considers legal action against police as she speaks for first time after release from prison

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Lucy Connolly is set to meet with members of the Trump campaign following her release from prison for inciting racial hatred, she said.

The former childminder told Dan Wootton on his YouTube show Trump’s lawyers were “very interested in the way things are going in the UK” and “keen to speak” with her, adding they are “big advocates for free speech”.

The 42-year-old from Northampton, said she had been made “[Sir Keir] Starmer’s political prisoner” when she was sentenced to 31 months in jail after posting on X: “Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f****** hotels full of the bastards for all I care … if that makes me racist so be it.”

Connolly, the wife of a Conservative councillor, had pleaded guilty to inciting racial hatred by publishing and distributing “threatening or abusive” written material. She served 40 per cent of her sentence, before being released on Thursday on licence.

Speaking to The Telegraph following her release, she said she made the post in a “red mist” fit of anger, before later deleting it after returning from a walk. Eight days later, she was arrested at her home and questioned by police.

Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar were killed in Southport, an incident that triggered riots across the country (Merseyside Police/PA)

Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar were killed in Southport, an incident that triggered riots across the country (Merseyside Police/PA) (PA Media)

The 42-year-old said she knew the authorities wanted to “hammer” after she was refused bail and the Crown Prosecution Service released a statement that suggested she told officers in her police interview she did not like immigrants.

A press release from the CPS after her guilty plea on September 2 included a quote from Frank Ferguson, head of the Crown Prosecution Service’s Special Crime and Counter Terrorism Unit, which said: “During police interview Lucy Connolly stated she had strong views on immigration, told officers she did not like immigrants and claimed that children were not safe from them.”

Connolly claimed her words were “massively twisted and used against me”, and is now considering taking legal action.

She said: “I don’t want to say too much because I need to seek legal advice on that, but I do think the police were dishonest in what they released and what they said about me, and I will be holding them to account for that.”

She also added she believed she had been targeted because her husband was a Conservative councillor.

“I’m just a woman from Northampton living in a three-bed semi that worked as a childminder with a husband as an engineer,” she told The Telegraph. “Okay, he was a councillor. But that, people forget, that’s almost like a second job.

“His first job as an engineer, as a father, as a husband, we are nobody. We are not known to anybody. So I will never understand how it got to this.

“There’s people that have done far worse and people wouldn’t be able to name them, but they’d know my name, and I just find it all really, really bizarre.”

This is a breaking story – more to follow