Roy Larner, dubbed the 'Lion of London Bridge,' is a survivor of the terrorist attack last month during which he charged three armed terrorists, whilst shouting "f*ck you, I am Millwall." Millwall is the name of the football team that he supports.
Larner, who was unarmed at the time of the attack, suffered severe injuries to the neck and chest in his desperate effort to buy others time to flee.
He was only saved due to the fast response of armed police units.
The 47-year-old unemployed Millwall fan gained a significant social media following after the attack, and a campaign was launched to get him back on his feet, raising ยฃ50,000 ($64,400).
However, an old video has recently surfaced, showing Larner spitting at and racially insulting a photographer as he was walking his dogs near an anti-racism protest.
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The incident reportedly occurred in February in the Elephant and Castle area, months before Larner became famous.
It is unclear what caused the confrontation, as the video begins mid-argument, showing the father of one becoming increasingly irritated by reporter who was photographing him.
The footages shows Larner spitting and launching racial abuse at the reporter.
"Foreigners, c**t. "Foreign c**ts. F off. F off you rapist c**ts," the now famous Millwall fan is heard shouting.One of the protesters approached Larner in what appears to be an attempt to head-butt him.
"W*nkers, people like you stink like sh*t," he further exclaims.
Although Larner has not yet presented his explanation of the incident, his mother, quoted by the Independent, said that the protesters harassed Larner and his dogs, and he was standing up to them.
"They said something to Roy about the dogs, when he was taking them for a walk," she said. "These blokes, about four or five of them said something to Roy and he turned round and you know, he'll stand up to anyone.
"I don't know what they said to him, I was in a hurry and we were not really talking at the time.
"He was taking the dogs for a walk and was on his way back to his girlfriend's, he gave them a mouthful.
"He is certainly quite a character, he can be a bit of a handful."
Reader Comments
Sure, there's a class of black Londoner that will shout 'racist' over any tiny thing they encounter that displeases them, but, frankly, with a lot of this stuff I can't be arsed to get into the descending hair-splittingness of it all. F'rinstance, the amount of times I've been 'round a black person's house, flipped through their record collection, only to find they don't own one record that was made by a white person. I don't think RACIST, I just think "Well, that's just your tough shit really", and I can't see that repackaging white working class Cockneys from The Elephant and Castle as an oppressed minority group would be much of an advance on things, although according to any old SJW criteria they would count as that. As far as actual, in-your-face-racism goes, in London there isn't much, although there's sometimes a lot of vanity wailing about 'perceived' racism.