Starmer's Home Office GASLIGHTS Rhiannon Whyte's Family & Our Nation
Blood on Their Hands: The Home Office’s Insulting "Shared Anger"
Rhiannon Skye Whyte was 27.
She was a daughter, a friend, a hard-working Brit simply trying to get home.
She was stabbed to death at a train station by a man who had no right to be in this country — in a frenzied, unprovoked attack. A man put up in a hotel at your expense by a “system” that prioritises paperwork over public protection.
The Home Office has finally piped up. Their statement is a masterclass in bureaucratic double-speak — the kind that makes you want to put your foot through the television.
“The murder of Rhiannon Whyte was an abhorrent crime… This vile criminal is behind bars where he belongs… We share the public’s anger about the broken asylum system and hotels.”
Spot the Lie
“We share the public’s anger”?
Give me a break.
If they shared our anger, they would act like it.
They would stop the boats.
They would deport foreign criminals clogging our prisons.
They would leave the rotten human-rights laws of the Euro-courts that protect everyone except British citizens.
They would stop treating the British border like a polite suggestion.
Instead, they call the crime “abhorrent” while presiding over the very policies that made it possible.
They talk about “dangerous offenders” as if this man fell from the sky — rather than being ushered into a hotel, the very hotel where Rhiannon worked, by a department that has lost total control.
Two-Tier Justice: By the Numbers
The Home Office loves to talk about “justice.”
So let’s look at the facts they’d rather you forget:
Peter Lynch — sentenced to 2 years and 8 months within weeks for shouting at a protest. He died in prison.
Lucy Connolly — sentenced to 2 years and 7 months for a tweet.
Rhiannon’s killer — in the country for just 11 weeks before the murder, yet “justice” took 15 months to conclude.
Why the delay?
Because the system spent months — and vast sums — trying to verify that this man was not a teenager, as he claimed.
Despite the fact he had travelled across Europe, rejected by every country he tried to enter.
Britain?
No questions asked.
When the state wants to crush a protester or a grandmother with a keyboard for spicy words online, it moves at lightning speed.
When an illegal arrival murders one of our own, the wheels of justice suddenly grind to a halt.
The Real Life Sentence
I reached out to Siobhan Whyte because her family could be mine — or yours.
Her story is uniquely horrifying, yet terrifyingly relatable. I cannot bear to see good people’s lives ruined by men who should never have been allowed to breach the gate.
The Home Office boasts of a “life sentence.”
Here’s a radical thought: the strictest punishment would have been never letting him in.
The real life sentence belongs to Rhiannon’s family.
They are the ones paying the price for a political class that values international approval over British lives — and treats our safety as an administrative inconvenience.
Enough of the Pious Platitudes
The “broken asylum system” isn’t a force of nature like the weather.
It was built this way by the very people now claiming to be angry about it.
They tell us they’re “doing everything they can” while maintaining the very pull-factors that fill these hotels.
When Siobhan mentioned me as a voice for her grief, it wasn’t because I have a magic wand.
It’s because I’m willing to say what the Home Office won’t:
This was avoidable.
We don’t want your “thoughts.”
We don’t want your “shared anger.”
We want a border.
We want our safety back.
And we want a government that puts British lives first.
May God rest Rhiannon Skye Whyte.
And may her family finally be allowed to grieve.


Well said ,Darren and the majority of the British public agree with you. That's why Reform UK are riding high in the polls. Our Political and media class plus all the other anti British "elites"have blood on their hands. RIP Rhiannon. God Bless her family 🙏🙏🙏🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧. Thanks ,Darren x
Thanks Darren, spot on as ever ❤️