A "fanatical" couple who named their baby after Hitler have been convicted of being members of a neo-Nazi terrorist group.

Adam Thomas and Claudia Patatas of Waltham Gardens, Banbury, Oxfordshire, were convicted at Birmingham Crown Court after a seven-week trial.

The 22-year-old and his partner Patatas, 38, were on trial accused of being members of the "extreme and violent" far-right group National Action, which was banned in 2016.

The court heard that Thomas, who gave their baby the middle name Adolf, posed for a photo with the child while wearing Ku Klux Klan robes.

Image: Patatas leaving Birmingham Crown Court last month

It emerged that counter-terrorism officers from Prevent had visited the couple's home in October last year "due to concerns Ms Patatas may be involved in the extreme right wing".


A third defendant, Daniel Bogunovic, of Crown Hills Rise, Leicester, was also convicted of being a member.

Image: Thomas posing with his baby while wearing KKK robes. Pic: West Midlands Police

The warehouse worker was a leading figure in National Action's Midlands chapter.

Thomas, a former Amazon security guard, was also convicted on a majority verdict of having a copy of a document likely to be of use to a terrorist, which explained how to make a "viable" bomb.

Image: A coat with a swastika armband was found at their home. Pic: West Midlands Police

Lawyers said that after being banned by the government in December 2016, National Action simply "shed one skin for another" and "rebranded".

Image: A swastika pastry cutter found in the couple's home. Pic: West Midlands Police

Jurors heard evidence of social media chats involving Thomas, Patatas and Bogunovic, discussing what prosecutors have alleged was the banned group's continuing operation, under a different name.

The jury also heard that Thomas and Patatas plastered National Action stickers in public locations after the ban, while Bogunovic was calling for a "leadership" meeting in a chat group for senior members in April 2017.

Image: Daniel Bogunovic. Pic: West Midlands Police

During evidence in his defence, given from the witness box, Thomas - a self-confessed Holocaust denier and racist - said he moved to Israel when he was 18 in a bid to convert to Judaism.

He added that he was motivated to look at converting because it would have allowed him to join the Israeli military.

He told the jury he lived in kibbutzes and at a college while in Israel, said he "just lost interest" and returned home in August 2016.

He met Patatas - who jurors heard told a chat group "bring back concentration camps" - in a pub in December that year, and had a baby with her at the end of 2017.

Image: A crossbow was also found. Pic: West Midlands Police

Three other men who had been due to stand trial alongside the trio, admitted being National Action members before the trial began.

Thomas's close friend Darren Fletcher, 28, of Kitchen Lane, Wednesfield, West Midlands, Joel Wilmore, 24, of Bramhall Road, Stockport, Greater Manchester, and Nathan Pryke, 26, of Dartford Road, March, Cambridgeshire, will be sentenced later.

It can now also be reported that an Army veteran was at the heart of National Action, which set its sights on recruiting within the armed forces.

Image: Ex-soldier Vehvilainen wanted to establish an all-white stronghold in a Welsh village

White supremacist and self-confessed racist Corporal Mikko Vehvilainen, 34, believed in a coming "race war" and wanted to help establish an all-white stronghold in a Welsh village.

The Royal Anglian Regiment soldier was convicted after a trial in March of being a member and was jailed for eight years.

Prosecutors said at Vehvilainen's trial that he was working within the Army as a "recruiter" for the banned organisation.

It can now be revealed he was connected to three other soldiers, one of whom was thrown out of the Army.

Before his conviction, Vehvilainen was considered an "outstanding" soldier.

Thomas had applied to join the army twice but failed both times.

In total, 10 people have now been convicted or admitted membership of the terrorist group.

Counter-terrorism police are continuing to investigate suspected off-shoots of National Action.