Oliver Baden-Powell pictured arriving at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in May
A former Harrow public schoolboy attacked six people at an AA meeting before flooring a child with a roundhouse kick, it has been claimed.
Oliver Baden-Powell is accused of attacking men and women at St Edmund, King and Martyr, an Anglican church in the heart of the City of London in April.
The 42-year-old also stole a Mammouth bag with a iPad Pro worth £900, an iPad keyboard worth £150 and £250 worth of Lulalemon clothes, it was said.
Former LSE student Baden-Powell, who is not thought to be a direct descendant to the founder of the Scout Movement, faces seven counts of assault, two counts of affray and one count of theft.
In a separate incident, Baden-Powell also allegedly attacked a child outside the Natural History Museum in South Kensington a month later on May 12.
He then allegedly called a police officer a ‘p*ki’ after being arrested and is charged with causing grievous bodily harm with intent and racially aggravated harassment.
At City of London Magistrates Court today, he appeared in the dock where he spoke only to confirm his name, date of birth, address and his nationality as British.
Baden-Powell made no indication of pleas to the ten charges relating to the church incidents.
Sian Morgan prosecuting said: ‘All the incidents come from an AA meeting at a church.’
Chair of the bench Andrew McMurtie told the defendant: ‘The ten matters from the charges against you stemming from the incident on April 5 are going to be added to the other matters.
‘So these cases are going to be sent to the crown court.’
Baden-Powell, of Pimlico, south London, was remanded into custody and will appear at Isleworth Crown Court next month.
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