đ´ MANCHESTER AIRPORT ATTACK TRIAL: FINAL WEEK ROUND-UP
Closing speeches heard in trial of Mohammed Fahir Amaaz & Muhammad Amaad over Manchester Airport clash. Final prosecution and defence cases presented to jury. The final speeches for the prosecution and the defence have been delivered, with the jury hearing Mr Greaney KC for the Crown, and Imran Khan KC and Ms Gardner for the defendants Mr Amaaz and Mr Amaad.
The case hinges on whether the brothers struck out in aggression or acted in lawful self-defence.
The prosecution argue that the video evidence, which has been dissected in detail and referred to throughout the trial, shows clear aggression. In his speech, Mr Greaney KC urged jurors to âplease trust your eyes and earsâ, referring additionally to testimony from neutral witnesses that described Amaaz as the aggressor in the Starbucks head-butt incident.
Addressing the version of events given by the defendants, the prosecution characterised Amaazâs claim that he had not been aware he was striking women as âbare-faced liesâ. The prosecution asked the jury to draw conclusions from this regarding the reliability and honesty of the entire account given by Amaaz, with Amaad being similarly accused of lying to protect his brother.
The KC for the Crown told the court that the no-comment police interviews leave the brothers lacking key supporting evidence for the claim that they felt threatened and were acting in self defence.
The prosecution summarised the altercation with armed police as a case of the officers simply doing their job and attempting a lawful arrest, and suggested that Amaad would have understood that his brother was being arrested for assault and, the prosecution claim, unlawfully intervening. Regarding anything that came later, including the kick to Amaazâs head, jurors were urged to consider this as irrelevant to the case.
For the defence, Imran Khan KC said the injuries suffered by officers must be seen in context. He told jurors Amaaz was reacting to what he believed was a lethal threat to his brotherâs life.
He argued that Amaaz had seen a Taser being drawn and genuinely believed it to be a firearm. âIt was about getting rid of the threat he faced,â Mr Khan said. He acknowledged that PC Wardâs injuries were serious, but told jurors: âYes, itâs horrible â but heâs trying to save his brotherâs life.â
Mr Khan criticised the officersâ conduct, claiming PC Marsden was angry and aggressive, and had âthrown the rulebook awayâ. He told jurors: âIf you are assaulted unlawfully, you would think you would be able to defend yourself as best you could in the circumstances.â
He said that PC Marsdenâs later claim to a colleague â that there were 10 to 15 people brawling â was a lie, and described the officerâs behaviour as the root cause of the confrontation, not the defendants.
Ms Gardner, appearing for Mr Amaad, described her clientâs actions as limited and defensive. She said he was trying to de-escalate matters.
She said nothing was said by the officers â âNot even that they are policeâ â and told jurors: âCertainly no announcement of any intent to arrest or detain. Thatâs crucial.â
Describing PC Marsden as âan uncontrolled bully with a badgeâ, Ms Gardner said her client believed he was under attack and responded as anyone would in that moment of confusion and fear.
She argued that the brothers had not gone looking for a fight, had never been in trouble before, and were disorientated by the situation.
Lacking audio, she described video footage as âa jigsaw which has a piece missingâ and told the jury that it cannot reveal âwhat is going on in someoneâs mindâ.
Closing her speech, she accused PC Marsden of being âunhingedâ, acting under a âred mistâ of anger, and urged the jury to return a not guilty verdict.
The judge is expected to begin his summing-up on Monday morning, after which the jury will retire to consider their verdicts.
Well, thatâs all for now. But until our next article, please stay tuned, stay informed, but most of all stay safe, and Iâll see you then.