Daniel Frost, 44, a father of two from Southampton, was jailed for two years and four months at Southampton Crown Court.
He was sent to prison for violent disorder and possessing an offensive weapon - a dog lead with a metal carabiner which he had fashioned into a "makeshift knuckleduster".
Reece Robinson, 21, from Havant, was jailed for two years for violent disorder.
He was sentenced for throwing two stones or small bricks during the protest in the Portswood area on 2 June.
The sentences were for their part in the violent disorder during a demonstration after the murder of Mr Nowak, an 18-year-old student.
Judge William Mousley KC said of the disorder: "This violence was a hate crime borne out of a hatred for police and in some part racist views.
"The impact on the community was profound, local residents were subjected to fear, distress and genuine sense of danger."
Siobhan Linsley, prosecuting, previously told the court that Frost was visible in police body-worn video shown to the court wearing a camouflage face-covering as he threw chairs from a garden into the road in front of the officers.
She said the defendant then "somewhat ostentatiously wraps the rope around his arm and the clip around his hand, forming what the observing officers feared to be a handmade knuckle duster".
Ms Linsley added: "In response to hearing this, the defendant said it was a dog lead but repeatedly invited the officers to come and take it from him."
After he was arrested, Frost described the disorder as "a big party", said Ms Linsley.
She said that Frost had 25 previous convictions for 55 offences, including a six-year sentence for robbery and GBH, weapons offences, public order offences and burglary offences.
Describing Robinson's involvement, Ms Linsley said: "Mr Robinson was seen at the disorder on St Denys Road, he was topless with an orange high vis vest around his neck obscuring his face.
"He bent down to pick up small stones or bricks on two occasions and throws them towards the police cordon."
She added that when Robinson, who has no previous convictions or cautions, was arrested, he told officers: "I didn't really do much."
Judge Mousley, turning to Robinson, said: "You were present throughout the violence and could have left at any time.
"You have brought shame to your family."
Bridget O'Hagan, defending, told the judge in mitigation that Robinson's involvement was "totally out of character" and borne out of a "moment of madness".
Frost and Robinson were the third and fourth men to be jailed following the sentencing of Leon O'Leary, 41, from Basingstoke, and Connor Bishop, 24, of Southampton, on Tuesday.
O'Leary was jailed at the same court for three years and one month for violent disorder, resisting a police officer and possession of an offensive weapon - a samurai sword in his bedroom.
Bishop was jailed for two years and eight months for violent disorder.
Afghan national Mohammad Tajik, 32, was sentenced to two years in prison at Canterbury Crown Court on Wednesday due to his involvement in a crossing on 17 January.
Tajik abandoned the dinghy he was driving across the English Channel and its passengers when a rescue ship arrived, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.
The boat was overcrowded and some passengers were not wearing life jackets during the attempted crossing in poor weather conditions.
Prosecutor Daniel Bunting said Tajik had: "No experience or knowledge of piloting a boat, he was asking others to look on YouTube for assistance."
At the same time, Sudanese national Alnour Ali, 26, was sentenced by the court to two years and three months in prison over his role in a separate crossing.
Ali had admitted to the charge of endangering others during a sea crossing on 9 April.
On the same day, two men and two women drowned after being swept away by strong currents while trying to climb on to a dinghy at Equihen-Plage, near Boulogne-sur-Mer in France.
However, Judge James made clear that Ali was not being sentenced in relation to those four deaths and hit out at misinformation, which they branded as "unhelpful".
Drone footage was played in court of the boat with 74 people on board, where Ali is seen driving while wearing a pink hat.
Passengers were seen in the footage straddling the side of the boat; some had their legs dangling in the water.
A French boat came up alongside the dinghy and handed out life-jackets, at which point Mr Bunting said Ali had the opportunity to stop.
Sentencing them, Judge Simon James said: "The inherent dangers of seeking to navigate one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world in a vessel which was never designed to undertake such a journey are obvious.
"However, the risk of death and serious injury are significantly increased when boats have no navigational aides, are overcrowded and those on board are not adequately equipped with safety equipment."
Read more from Sky News:
Ukrainian strikes hit arms factory and oil refinery deep in Russia
Hundreds of phones and laptops lost by MoD
Barrister Paul Hogben told the court Ali was of good character and was ordered to steer the boat by armed people traffickers when he embarked.
He was born in a village in the Darfur region of Sudan where he and his parents, three brothers and six sisters were forced to flee their home during the civil war.
The court also heard from barrister Niall Doherty, defending Tajik, that the father-of-one left Afghanistan after witnessing the Taliban shoot and kill his father and brother for refusing to put yellow powder in food served to soldiers in their restaurant, which they believed would have fatal consequences.
Fearing he would be targeted, he fled to seek asylum, first trying in Greece where he was refused, before travelling on to Europe and the UK.
The pair both have submitted claims for asylum since being in the UK, the court heard.
What is the new offence?
Endangering others during a journey by sea to the UK is a new offence that came into force in January as part of new border security legislation.
Under the offence, those who endanger or risk another life at sea could face up to five years in prison. That rises to a maximum of six years for those in breach of a deportation order.
According to the Home Office, the offence is designed to stop people being crammed into unsafe boats and would apply to those involved in physical aggression and intimidation, as well as anyone who resists rescue.
It covers physical or psychological injury and journeys by water to the UK from France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Everton had 10 points deducted in late 2023 for financial misdemeanours, reduced to six points on appeal a few months later, under Farhad Moshiri's previous regime.
They finished four points above 18th-placed Burnley in 2021/22, but the Lancashire club successfully argued that had the six-point penalty for PSR breaches been applied that season, then they would have survived at Everton's expense.
Everton officials have lodged an immediate appeal over what they view as a "flawed" judgment. Sky Sports News reported the club are astonished and will vigorously contest what they see as a hugely excessive judgment.
Read more from Sky News:
Manhunt for prisoner who escaped from van
Seven men arrested after man stabbed to death in street
The club said in a statement that they are "clear in the belief the ruling is fundamentally flawed in both law and fact".
"This ruling sets a dangerous and unworkable precedent for English football, given it is constructed on a principle that a club can be in breach of financial rules at any point in a financial year," the statement read.
"Everton believes the panel's ruling misrepresents the clear evidence presented by its legal representatives and that an appeal will be successful."
Everton's compensation order was £26m, plus £9.1m in interest, but there is more interest to be added on, which could bring the total to close to £40m.
Burnley are believed to have sought £51.7m in recompense, but Everton fundamentally disputed the calculation of the extent of the financial loss.
Other clubs had explored the possibility of suing but chose not to go ahead, and there are no further outstanding cases.
Everton were judged to have overspent by £19.5m for the accounting period, but they argue they were unaware they were going to be in breach, and there were six weeks between Burnley being relegated and the end of their financial year when they could have taken steps to prevent the breach.
Chatchawan Thongpia, 31, is believed to have lost his balance while walking around the Italian city on the evening of 3 November last year.
An inquest heard Mr Thongpia, who was living in Scarborough but was also said to have resided at Brooklands Farm in Exeter, was beginning a five-day trip to Venice with his partner Samantha Lichfield.
On their first night, Mr Thongpia, a mechanical engineer, left their hotel to go for a walk and smoke some CBD he had bought that day.
Ms Lichfield said she decided not to go because they had been awake since 2.30am.
Her statement said Mr Thongpia, who was born in Thailand, was going to find a quiet alley so no one could smell the smoke.
She said: "As time was going on I was getting more and more anxious, I didn't expect him to be gone for very long."
Ms Lichfield tried to sleep but was woken by the hotel receptionist telling her the police were downstairs, the inquest heard.
Read more from Sky News:
Growing unease over UK's stuttering efforts to rearm
Jail for Southampton Henry Nowak murder protesters
The inquest at North Yorkshire Coroner's Court heard that a witness was walking around Campo Santa Marina at around 6.30pm and spotted a body in the water.
He attempted to grab the person through the bars of a bridge, but could not hold on to him due to the strong current.
The witness asked another family on the bridge to contact the emergency services, who could not resuscitate Mr Thongpia when he was recovered.
A report from the Italian police said CCTV had captured some of Mr Thongpia's movements, but not the moment he entered the canal.
They said he was believed to have "accidentally fallen into the water, presumably after losing his balance" and drifted tens of metres due to the strong current.
A post-mortem examination found that Mr Thongpia did not have any injuries that suggested he had been assaulted, or that a third party had been involved in his death.
A cannabinoid found in his system was likely to have been consumed three hours earlier, the pathologist said.
His report said it was "possible but not probable" that this had caused Mr Thongpia's motor skills to be impaired.
The medical cause of death was drowning.
Coroner Catherine Devereux said police believed Mr Thongpia may have leaned against a railing and accidentally fallen into the canal.
But she told the hearing: "No one witnessed how he came to be in the canal that evening."
Ms Devereux recorded an open conclusion.
Davies said it was "goodbye" from him to Doctor Who but "hello to a big new future for the show", as he shared on social media a drawing of the Tardis - the spaceship from the hit show.
The 2026 Christmas special was due to be written by Davies and produced by Bad Wolf, and would follow on from the series finale in May last year, which saw Ncuti Gatwa's incarnation of the Doctor regenerate into Billie Piper.
The corporation announced last October there would be a 2026 Christmas special, but confirmed on Wednesday it will no longer happen.
Davies, an award-winning screenwriter and TV producer, said on Instagram: "There won't be a Christmas Special - we only cooked that up to guarantee a future when no one knew what would happen, but now we do know, there's no need for it.
"You'll have to wait a bit longer for new Doctor Who...but you'll be waiting for more Doctor Who than a one-off. So it's worth it!"
He also said he was "excited as anyone to see what comes next" and reflected on the possible changes to come, adding: "Will they keep the theme tune? Will they lose the blue box? Will they bring back the Drahvin?!
"It's all up for grabs, which is so Doctor Who - exciting and unpredictable and new! Here comes the future."
The BBC said that the series, which launched in 1963, will be put out to "competitive tender" this year as part of its Royal Charter agreement.
The broadcaster is inviting production companies to put themselves forward to help co-produce the next series, BBC News reported.
Cancelling the Christmas special was "not taken lightly", the corporation said, and the BBC admitted the move will be "disappointing for fans".
It added that "in order to set the show up for future series, it was decided that rather than bridge the gap with a one-off special, we are choosing to push forward to invest in the long-term future of the show".
A spokesperson for the BBC added: "Doctor Who remains an important part of the BBC and this tender underpins the BBC's continued commitment to Doctor Who, ensuring audiences will enjoy the show for years to come."
In addition, the corporation assured that its previously announced Doctor Who animation series, which will air on CBeebies, is currently in production.
Read more from Sky News:
Henry Nowak protesters jailed
Ukraine strikes Russian factory
Doctor Who is about an eccentric Time Lord who travels in a spaceship larger on the inside, which disguises itself as a 1960s British police box.
Tom Baker, Sylvester McCoy and William Hartnell are among the stars who portrayed The Doctor in the original show, which was cancelled in 1989.
It was later revived in 2005 by Davies.
Actors including Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant, Matt Smith and Jodie Whittaker have played the leading role in the last two decades.




