Police have launched an investigation into Brexit campaigner and founder of Reasoned UK Darren Grimes on Saturday over a controversial interview he fronted where David Starkey said slavery was not genocide due to the number of black people around today.
Metropolitan Police confirmed in a statement that “on 4 July, the Metropolitan Police Service was passed an allegation from Durham Police of a public order offence relating to a social media video posted online on 30 June".
“The matter is currently being investigated".
In the interview in question hosted by Grimes, published on Reasoned UK's YouTube channel, and the 75-year old Dr Starkey, claims that slavery was "not genocide, otherwise there wouldn’t be so many damn blacks in Africa or in Britain, would there?".
“An awful lot of them survived and again there’s no point in arguing against globalisation or Western civilisation. They are all products of it, we are all products of it", he continued.
“The honest teaching of the British Empire is to say, quite simply, it is the first key stage of our globalisation".
He described the empire as "probably the most important moment in human history and it is still with us".
Mr Grimes is been given support by the Free Speech Union (FSU), which described the accusation against him as "absurd".
"The only hatred Dr Starkey stirred up was against himself. Mr Grimes himself publicly apologised for having broadcast Dr Starkey's remarks, saying that he 'should have robustly questioned Dr Starkey about his comments", said Toby Young, the General Secretary of the FSU.
"Plainly, Mr Grimes would never have made this announcement if he had intended to stir up racial hatred in the course of a broadcast only days earlier".
The Labour Party's Shadow Attorney General Karl Turner issued a tweet defending the move by the Met policy saying that freedom of speech "doesn't afford people the freedom to make racist remarks or generally offend". The post was later deleted.
Following the interview, Dr Starkey resigned his honorary fellowship at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, and Canterbury Christ Church University ended his position as visiting professor, describing the comments as “completely unacceptable”.
He issued an apology on 6 July, saying his “principal regret” was that his “blundering use of language” that could put freedom of speech under threat.
Starkey has also made comparisons between the BLM movement and Daesh terrorists.