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Mystery ‘El Money’ figure paid men to set fire to property linked to Starmer, court hears

A police officer stands outside a property linked to the prime minister after it was damaged in a suspected arson attack last year. Photograph: Toby Melville/ReutersView image in fullscreenA police officer stands outside a property linked to the prime minister after it was damaged in a suspected arson attack last year. Photograph: Toby Melville/ReutersMystery ‘El Money’ figure paid men to set fire to property linked to Starmer, court hearsThree defendants deny plotting arson attack on two homes and a car connected to prime minister in London last year

A series of arson attacks on property linked to Keir Starmer was masterminded by a Russian-speaking contact using the pseudonym “El Money”, a court has heard.

Roman Lavrynovych, 22, and Petro Pochynok, 35, both from Ukraine, and Stanislav Carpiuc, 27, a Romanian national, sat with their heads bent towards interpreters as Duncan Atkinson KC, prosecuting, opened the trial over the arson attacks in May last year.

“Three fires in the same area within five days would be pretty unusual,” Atkinson told the jury. “However, three fires all involving property linked to the same person were beyond a coincidence.”

Over five days last May, police were called to a fire at a house in north London connected to Starmer, another at a property nearby where he used to live and a blaze involving a car that also once belonged to the prime minister.

Lavrynovych faces three counts of arson with intent to endanger life or being reckless as to whether life would be endangered. Pochynok and Carpiuc are also accused of conspiracy to commit arson. The men deny the charges.

It is alleged the three men with links to Ukraine were offered payment to set fire to a car and two houses linked to Starmer by a Russian-speaking contact named “El Money”.

On 8 May, a Toyota RAV4, once owned by Starmer before he sold it to a neighbour, was set ablaze. Another fire took place on 11 May at the front door of a property in Islington, north London, which Starmer had previously managed.

A third fire was set in the early hours of 12 May outside the Kentish Town home where Starmer lived before he moved into Downing Street, and where his sister-in-law was now living.

Jurors were told it was “no part of your considerations” to decide who “El Money” was and “what reason he might have had” to coordinate the defendants’ actions. Atkinson also said the jury did not need to decide “what motivated” the defendants to carry out the arson attacks.

“It does not matter whether they knew that the property they were targeting was connected to the prime minister or whether that formed part of their motivation,” said Atkinson.

The prosecutor also said videos and images recovered by the police showed a Toyota RAV4, which once belonged to the prime minister, on fire, as well as one of the addresses linked to Starmer being set alight.

“The evidence demonstrated that there was here, no coincidence,” said Atkinson. “Rather, the vehicle and the two properties in question had been targeted, and the acts of arson at these locations had been planned and directed, with those involved promised payment for their participation.”

The court heard more than 320 messages dating back to September 2024 were recovered between Lavrynovych and “El Money”, who communicated in Russian in contrast to the Ukrainian used by the defendants.

Jurors were shown CCTV footage of Lavrynovych buying white spirit in south-east London two days before the Toyota was set on fire, the court heard.

“The fires were set in the dead of night, when the occupants of the addresses would inevitably have been asleep,” said Atkinson. “The prosecution’s case is that when he did so he must have intended to endanger – to risk – the lives of the people living inside those houses.”

He added: “Why else would you set fire to the front door, blocking the residents’ escape?”

The trial is expected to continue until the end of May.

Read original at The Guardian

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