TikTok tearaway Mizzy in touch with 'toxic influencer' Andrew Tate

Mizzy claims ‘toxic influencer’ Andrew Tate told him to ‘respect other people’s feelings’… while TikTok tearaway, 18, mocks the law with new videos after being arrested for ‘flouting court ban on sharing clips online’

  • Bacari-Bronze O’Garro, 18, spent the bank holiday weekend in police custody
  • It follows alleged breaches of a criminal behaviour order imposed last week 

TikTok tearaway Mizzy has claimed ‘toxic influencer’ Andrew Tate has told him to ‘respect other people’s feelings’ after he was busy trolling the law – again – last night after being released from prison.

In videos posted on TikTok and Twitter the teenager, whose real name is Bacari-Bronze O’Garro, credited Tate’s brother Tristan for reaching out to him and telling him to ‘hold more accountability for my actions as I develop into a Man.’

It followed O’Garro posting clips yesterday in which he celebrated outside HMP Thameside after being granted bail, following alleged breaches of the terms of a criminal behaviour order (CBO).

Andrew and Tristan Tate are both under house arrest in Romania under suspicion of human trafficking, rape and organised crime. Leading charities have strongly criticised the brothers’ conservative views on women’s rights and ‘toxic’ masculinity. 

In a lengthy video and statement on social media on Wednesday, O’Garro lauded the suspected-human traffickers and said Tristan Tate ‘reached out to me when the whole world was against me.’

In videos posted on TikTok and Twitter the teenager, whose real name is Bacari-Bronze O’Garro, credited Tate’s brother Tristan for reaching out to him

Andrew (pictured) and his brother Tristan Tate are both under house arrest in Romania

He said he was ‘in talks with the Tate brothers’, adding: ‘I have the power now.’

O’Garro, from Hackney, east London, previously appeared at Thames Magistrates’ Court last Wednesday and admitted failing to comply with a community protection notice. 

This followed a series of vile ‘pranks’ on social media which included him stealing a pet dog, asking a stranger if he ‘wanted to die’ and jumping on a passer-by. 

He sparked outrage with his antics, culminating in him putting a family ‘at risk’ by barging into their home with others while their young children were present, pretending he was trying to find a study group. 

Judge Charlotte Crangle issued him with a two-year criminal behaviour order (CBO), including that he must not directly or indirectly post videos on social media without the documented consent of those featured in the content.

On Wednesday he released a video alongside a lengthy statement on social media in which he admitted to having ‘put my mind into Mizzy being the biggest menace in the UK’.

He said: ‘The Tate Brothers have been helping me immensely, teaching me to actually take people’s feelings in and hold more accountability for my actions as I develop into a man.

‘They are also showing me that I can accomplish what I want in ways that won’t make me look like a villain and in the process also help others.’

He added he had ‘put my mind into Mizzy being the biggest menace in the UK’, adding: ‘It may not of been the best choice.’

In a video alongside the statement, O’Garro said he was ‘not a bad guy’ and ‘not all my pranks are bad’.

‘Mizzy’, 18, posted a new video last night ‘celebrating’ his release from custody

He was handed a criminal behaviour order last week after a series of pranks that included bursting into people’s homes and cars without permission

Under the terms of his CBO, O’Garro is not allowed to post any videos containing other people without their express consent to feature in it

He was granted bail yesterday by Thames Magistrates’ Court after spending the Bank Holiday weekend behind bars at HMP Thameside over three alleged breaches of the CBO. 

He is facing a magistrates’ court trial in July over accusations that he posted two further videos online without the consent of those featured and visited Westfield shopping centre in Stratford in breach of the order. 

In a video posted following his release from custody, O’Garro emerged from behind the HMP Thameside sign outside the prison, nodding and grinning as he clutched his possessions in a plastic bag.

He yelled ‘Yeah man!’ as he celebrated his release from prison. To the sound of laughter from the friend filming, O’Garro boasted: ‘We outside!’ Pointing to the sign, O’Garro sipped from a bottle and grinned widely at the camera. He posted the video with the caption: ‘The movement is real.’

In a second video posted just over an hour later, O’Garro filmed himself in a car being driven by a friend, with a second person in the rear seat behind him. One of the friends makes a rude gesture at the camera as loud music plays. 

Alongside the post, O’Garro wrote: ‘Everyone consented to be in the video’, followed by two laughing emojis. He added: ‘#mizzyisback’.

Under the terms of his CBO, O’Garro is not allowed to post any videos containing other people without their express consent to feature in it. 

He is also banned from certain places, including Westfield shopping centre in Stratford, east London.

The teenager was charged by the Metropolitan Police on Saturday with three alleged breaches of his criminal behaviour order after being arrested a day earlier.

Bacari-Bronze O’Garro was held at HMP Thameside during the bank holiday weekend over three alleged breaches of his CBO

Rose Edwin, prosecuting, had told Thames Magistrates’ Court at a previous hearing that two of the three alleged offences took place last Thursday, with O’Garro accused of posting a video on social media without the consent of the people featured. The court heard he also visited the Westfield Centre in Stratford.

O’Garro allegedly visited Hackney last Friday, where he is accused of posting a video on social media without the consent of the people featured.

He denied the charges when he appeared in court on Saturday, but was remanded in custody over the bank holiday weekend before his release yesterday.

It is understood that he was remanded over the weekend after his mother refused to allow him back home.

Speaking outside court yesterday, O’Garro claimed the breach of the CBO was not his fault.

He said: ‘I explained to the court that I didn’t know the breach was on my terms because they didn’t give me the map for the CBO around Westfield and stuff like that, so hopefully that gets bust.

‘I need to alternate the conditions.’ 

Since O’Garro’s arrest, previous videos have come to light, including showing him lying on the top of a moving bus and entering a driver’s compartment in a train in Stratford. 

Following a court appearance last Wednesday, he bragged about his antics in a TV interview with Piers Morgan, declaring: ‘UK laws are weak.’ 

On Wednesday O’Garro issued a statement on social media in which he revealed he was a father-of-one and apologised to a family after he walked into their house while their young children were at home.

He tweeted: ‘I made a very dumb stupid mistake. A house is supposed to be a safe space where you know you can relax without being in any sort of distress and me walking into that house was a very big violation to the homeowners. 

‘They had kids and I have a child myself so I know how protective people get over there children, if anybody came into my house on a weird flex and my child was there I don’t even know what I would do but just know it wouldn’t end well.’

Several hours later, Tristan Tate appeared to confirm O’Garro’s account that he had been speaking with the brothers. 

He wrote on Twitter: ‘The reason [Mizzy] apologised is not because he “got caught” or for likes. 

‘After talking in depth I truly believe he has taken a turn in the right direction and recognises the error of his ways. A long way to go but I’m hopeful.’

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