Two men
filmed felling of Sycamore Gap tree during ‘mindless’ act, court hears
Jury shown
phone footage with sound of chainsaw and toppling tree, in trial of pair who
deny criminal damage
Mark Brown
North of England correspondent
Tue 29 Apr
2025 14.26 BST
Two men
filmed themselves using a chainsaw to fell the famous Sycamore Gap tree on
Hadrian’s Wall in an act of “mindless criminal damage”, a court has heard.
Daniel
Graham, 39, and Adam Carruthers, 32, embarked on a “moronic mission” to cut
down in minutes a tree that had stood for more than 100 years, the prosecutor
Richard Wright KC told Newcastle crown court.
The two men,
from Cumbria, have denied two charges of criminally damaging the tree and
Hadrian’s Wall, where it stood.
Wright said
the tree had been in a dip in the wall in Northumberland national park. It had
become “a famous site, reproduced countless times in photographs, feature films
and art”, he said.
Graham and
Carruthers travelled in Graham’s Range Rover from Cumbria in the late hours of
27 September 2023, the court heard.
“By sunrise
on Thursday September 28, the tree had been deliberately felled with a chainsaw
in an act of deliberate and mindless criminal damage,” Wright said. “It fell on
to a section of Hadrian’s Wall, causing irreparable damage to the tree itself
and further damage to the wall.”
Wright said
the people responsible were Graham and Carruthers, who, in the technique they
used, showed “expertise and a determined, deliberate approach” to the felling.
He said:
“First, they marked the intended cut with silver spray paint, before cutting
out a wedge that would dictate the direction in which the tree would fall. One
of the men then cut across the trunk, causing the sycamore to fall, hitting the
wall. Whilst he did that, the other man filmed it, filmed the act on Daniel
Graham’s mobile telephone.”
The jury was
shown the phone footage, lasting two minutes 40 seconds, in which the chainsaw
and the sound of the tree toppling can be heard and the silhouette of a figure
using the saw can be seen.
The wedge
was put in the boot of Graham’s Range Rover – “perhaps a trophy taken from the
scene, to remind them of their actions. Actions they appear to have been
revelling in,” Wright said.
“During that
return journey Mr Carruthers received a video of his young child from his
partner. He replied to her: ‘I’ve got a better video than that.’ Minutes later
the video of the felling of the tree was sent from Graham’s phone to
Carruthers’ phone.
“At the time
of that text conversation the only people in the world who knew that the tree
had been felled were the men who had cut it down.”
The next day
the world’s media began reporting on the tree’s felling and the two men shared
social media posts, Wright said, with Graham messaging Carruthers: “Here we
go.”
Wright said
Carruthers sent Graham a Facebook post from a man called Kevin Hartness saying:
“Some weak people that walk this earth … disgusting behaviour.”
Two minutes
later Graham replied to Carruthers with a voice note saying: “That Kevin
Hartness comment. Weak … fucking weak? Does he realise how heavy shit is?”
Carruthers
replied with his own voice note saying: “I’d like to see Kevin Hartness launch
an operation like we did last night … I don’t think he’s got the minerals.”
Wright said
this was “the clearest confirmation, in their own voices, that Carruthers and
Graham were both responsible for the deliberate felling of the tree and the
subsequent damage to Hadrian’s Wall.”
The
prosecutor said messages between the two men talked about the felling of
Sycamore Gap going “wild” and “viral”. Wright said: “They are loving it,
they’re revelling in it. This is the reaction of the people that did it. They
still think it’s funny, or clever, or big.”
Carruthers
and Graham were once good friends, the jury was told, but not now. “That once
close friendship has seemingly completely unravelled, perhaps as the public
revulsion at their behaviour became clear to them,” Wright said. He said each
man may now be trying to blame the other.
Graham, of
Carlisle, and Carruthers, of Wigton, are jointly charged with causing criminal
damage worth £622,191 to the tree. They are also charged with causing £1,144 of
damage to Hadrian’s Wall, a Unesco world heritage site. The wall and the tree
belong to the National Trust.
Graham and
Carruthers deny all the charges against them.
The trial
continues.
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