Climate protester pleads guilty after pouring human faeces on Captain Tom Moore statue

Watch: Protester pours human faeces all over Captain Tom statue

A climate protester has pleaded guilty to causing criminal damage after pouring human faeces over a memorial statue of Captain Sir Tom Moore.

Madeleine Budd, 21, of Kedleston Avenue, Manchester, was arrested in central London on Sunday after the stunt that was carried out for the pressure group End UK Private Jets.

It comes after a video posted online on Friday showed human waste being poured onto the life-sized statue of the Second World War veteran in Thistley Meadow, Hatton, south Derbyshire.

Budd was charged with criminal damage by the Derbyshire Police on Monday. The former medical student appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday wearing a grey jumper. She pleaded guilty to causing criminal damage.

Prosecutor Jordan Pratt said: “On Friday 30 September the defendant attended a location in Hatton where there is a statue of Sir Captain Tom Moore.

“The statue is situated in a public area next to a road.

“She approached the statue and poured a bucket of human faeces all over this statue.

“She was wearing a white t-shirt which said ‘End UK Private Jets’.

“This act was filmed. It has already been seen by a number of people. This is an abhorrent act.

The late war veteran Captain Sir Tom Moore (PA Archive)
The late war veteran Captain Sir Tom Moore (PA Archive)

“I need not remind the court of the impact that Tom Moore had. He was a figurehead who people rallied round to raise tens of millions of pounds walking round his garden at the height of the pandemic.”

Mr Pratt said people will see Budd‘s act as “hugely disrespectful”.

He also argued that the offence was pre-meditated and would have required a huge degree of planning.

“The defendant has armed herself with a large amount of human faeces and turned it onto a statue,” he said.

“I imagine there will be a wide social outcry.”

Francesca Cociani, defending, made an application for conditional bail, saying Budd was living in a van on a south Enfield site and could remain there indefinitely, sign into police stations and agree not to attend protests.

Footage showed Budd pouring human waste over the life-sized statue (End UK Private Jets)
Footage showed Budd pouring human waste over the life-sized statue (End UK Private Jets)

But Ms Cieciora ruled that she had “substantial grounds” to believe Budd may commit another offence while on bail.

The judge told the court that the starting point for sentencing could be one year and six months in prison.

Budd will attend her next hearing at Westminster Magistrates Court on 25 October. She was remanded in custody.

Sir Tom shot to national fame when he raised almost £33m for NHS charities during the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic by walking laps of his garden aged 100.

He was later knighted by the Queen before he died after contracting Covid-19 in February 2021.

His daughter spoke out after the damage to the memorial, saying that it left her feeling “deeply saddened”.

Additional reporting by agencies