LONDON — It took well over a century for the Sycamore Gap tree to spread its limbs into the elegant canopy that made it a beloved site saddled between two hills along the ancient Hadrian's Wall in northern England.
It took less than three minutes to cut it down in an ''act of deliberate and mindless criminal damage," a prosecutor told jurors Tuesday.
Grainy black and white video of the tree's dramatic felling on Sept. 28, 2023 in Northumberland National Park was shown to jurors in Newcastle Crown Court as the trial of two men charged with cutting it down got underway.
A single person was silhouetted against the unmistakable shape of the tree as a whining chainsaw tore through the rings that marked each year of the tree's life. The shaky recording showed the branches swaying in the wind and then the tree began to teeter, followed by a loud cracking sound as it crashed onto the stone wall.
Until Tuesday, the tree's tumble hadn't been shown publicly, but discovery of the fallen tree reverberated across the U.K and caused a national uproar.
Defendants leave trail of evidence
Prosecutor Richard Wright said that the the defendants had embarked on a ''moronic mission'' to fell the tree and left a trail of evidence including video and photos connected through metadata to Sycamore Gap and appeared to boast of their feat the following day as news of the tree's demise traveled around the globe.
Daniel Graham, 39, and Adam Carruthers, 32, have pleaded not guilty to two counts each of criminal damage. Prosecutors said that the value of the tree exceeded 620,000 pounds (around $830,000) and damage to the wall, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, was assessed at 1,100 pounds (nearly $1,500).