Finsbury Park terror trial - as it happened: Suspect wanted to kill Jeremy Corbyn at pro-Palestinian march, court hears
Father-of-four, 48, denies charges of murder and attempted murder
The alleged Finsbury Park attacker has claimed he was not driving the van as it hit Muslim worshippers.
Darren Osborne told Woolwich Crown Court a man called Dave had jumped into the moving vehicle and unexpectedly ploughed it into victims while he was changing his trousers in the footwell.
The defendant claimed he, Dave and another man called Terry Jones, originally planned to attack a Muslim politician in Rochdale, and then a pro-Palestinian march in the hope of killing Jeremy Corbyn and protesters.
Mr Osborne could not explain how Dave disappeared afterwards and was not seen by dozens of witnesses.
He had told counter-terror police he was "flying solo" in interview shortly after attack, the court heard.
The father-of-four denies charges of murder and attempted murder after allegedly ramming a van into Muslim worshippers shortly after midnight on 19 June.
Please allow a moment for the live blog to load
Police told the jury CCTV shows only Mr Osborne inside the van and body camera footage taken shortly after his arrest shows him telling an officer that he was driving.
In an urgent safety interview conducted later in hospital, he allegedly told a counter-terrorism there was no one else involved, adding: "I'm flying solo, mate."
Prosecutor Jonathan Rees QC yesterday presented CCTV showing the movements of Mr Osborne driving around the area in the minutes before the attack.
Deemed by prosecutors to be an act of terrorism, it killed one man and seriously injured nine others, including a victim who was left trapped under the van.
Mr Rees said the new evidence was “directed at the issue of whether Mr Osborne, the defendant, acted together with other persons, specifically a man called Dave and a man called Terry Jones”.
The jury was played a series of CCTV footage clips showing the van used in the attack driving around Finsbury Park in the 10 minutes before the attack.
At one point it is seen parked while Mr Osborne, 48, buys a drink and returns, and there is a four-second gap in the coverage between cameras shortly afterwards.
Another clip shows the view of the attack from the other side of a fence that formed a dead end.
“One of the issues being considered is how many people got out of the van after the incident occurs,” Mr Rees said.
The van is seen crashing into bollards, with a single figure getting out of the driver’s door, stumbling and running off camera pursued by three people.
DC Hazel Londt, of the Metropolitan Police, told the court she had reviewed footage for eight hours and did not see anyone else inside the van.
Asked whether there was any evidence of anyone apart from Mr Osborne entering or leaving the vehicle, she replied: “No.”
Survivors of the attack previously told the court they saw only one person in the van and apprehended Mr Osborne after he allegedly attempted to flee, pinning him to the ground before police arrived.
“I’ve done my job, you can kill me now,” he allegedly told them, while smiling.
Experts concluded the van had been “intentionally steered” into a group of Muslims who had left Ramadan prayers at two nearby mosques.
They were clustered around 51-year-old Makram Ali, who had collapsed, and were waiting for an ambulance when the van struck.
A pathologist told the jury Mr Ali had not suffered a heart attack and died of “catastrophic” injuries caused by being run over.
The prosecution alleges that Mr Osborne deliberately targeted Muslims after becoming “brainwashed” in the wake of watching a television drama on the Rotherham grooming scandal and reading far-right posts.
The defendant allegedly drove from his home in Cardiff to target a pro-Palestinian march in London on 18 June but found surrounding roads closed by police and started searching for mosques in London.
Bar staff from a pub where Mr Osborne drank on the night before the attack told them he ranted about Muslims, grooming gangs, the Labour party and other topics before being told to leave.
Similar themes were addressed in a handwritten note found inside the van, which also hit out at figures including singer Lily Allen, Jeremy Corbyn and Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London.
The trial continues.
Mr Rees is questioning Mr Osborne about the decision he, Terry and Dave supposedly made after finding they couldn't drive into the Al-Quds march.
Mr Osbonre says: "I wanted to plough through as many of them as possible...I didn't really want to go through one or two people. If I was going to do something I wanted to do it properly, like."
Mr Rees is pushing Mr Osborne on the question of Dave and Terry, asking them why if they were there he didn't drive them from central into south London himself.
"That's a damn good question," he says.
Witnesses decribed meeting Mr Osborne in Lewisham, when he was asking directions to the nearest mosque
Mr Rees is pushing Mr Osborne on the question of Dave and Terry, asking them why if they were there he didn't drive them from central into south London himself.
"That's a damn good question," he says.
Witnesses decribed meeting Mr Osborne in Lewisham, when he was asking directions to the nearest mosque
Apologies if posts are repeating, there are some problems with internet connection in Woolwich Crown Court
Mr Osborne says he knew there was a "controversial" mosque in Finsbury Park and claims Terry and Dave told him to meet them there but "it goes in one ear and out of the other regarding directions for me"
The court has previously heard that Mr Osborne met two members of the public in Finsbury Park and asked them for directions to "the big mosque", telling one he wanted to know because he was going to do "a protest".
Mr Rees says his actions "were because you were trying to find your own way to the mosque, where you were trying to do something yourself" and that Terry and Dave - "if they exist" - were not in London
The jury is now being sent away from the day, to return at 10.30 tomorrow morning when Mr Osborne will continue being cross-examined in the witness stand
The live blog will shortly be coming to a close
That is the end for our coverage for the day, the live blog will restart at 10.30am.
Thank you for reading.
Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.