Pensioner Brutally Attacked in Racist Airport Rumble
Warren Easterbrook, a notorious career criminal, sparked chaos at Bexleyheath train station. He plonked himself next to a 65-year-old pensioner and started glaring aggressively. When the pensioner tried to walk off, Easterbrook launched a savage racial tirade, flicked off his own hat, and shoved the man.
The confrontation quickly spiralled into a savage brawl. Easterbrook repeatedly punched the pensioner in the face. But the tough pensioner fought back fiercely, grabbing a broken bottle from Easterbrook’s own booze and slashing his attacker’s neck in self-defence.
Repeat Offender Back on Streets Months After Jail
Easterbrook, 32, from Bonham Close, Belvedere, was locked up on January 12 for the train station attack and other crimes. But despite his jail time, he was back on the streets by May.
On May 30, CCTV caught him shirtless at a Co-op on Nuxley Road, swiping items and stuffing them into a backpack. When confronted, Easterbrook didn’t just slap the man once – he landed at least ten heavy blows.
His violent streak didn’t stop there. Upon arrest, he hurled homophobic abuse at officers and kicked them in the shins.
Theft Spree and Assaults Land Easterbrook Back Behind Bars
On October 7, Easterbrook was caught red-handed again in Ashford. He was nicking bottles of Moet champagne from Asda and a designer Tommy Hilfiger hoodie. Police also found pliers in his bag — the tools he used to rip security tags off.
At Woolwich Crown Court, he pleaded guilty to a string of offences:
- Assault causing actual bodily harm
- Racially aggravated public order offence
- Two counts of theft
- Common assault
- Three assaults on emergency workers
Judge Condemns Easterbrook’s Violent Past, Sends Him Back to Prison
Easterbrook’s criminal record is grim – 14 violent crimes and 43 theft-related offences. Judge Andrew Lees slammed his relentless offending, saying: “The only appropriate sentence is immediate imprisonment.”
The thug was sentenced to one year and four months behind bars. It seems Easterbrook’s reign of terror is finally paused – but will he stay locked up this time?