
Eighteen defendants allegedly involved in a Palestine Action raid on an Israeli-owned arms factory in the UK will no longer face charges of aggarvated burglary, after six others were acquitted of the same charges.
At Woolwich Crown Court in London on Wednesday, prosecutor Deanna Heer KC said the Crown Prosecution Service had "reconsidered the sufficiency of the evidence" and would offer no evidence on that charge.
The 18 will continue to face other charges in connection with the alleged raid.
The move follows the acquittal of six other defendants on charges of aggravated burglary in connection with the same break-in at an Elbit Systems plant near Bristol in August 2024.
Heer confirmed on Wednesday that those six defendants face a retrial at a date yet to be fixed on all charges which had not ended in verdicts, including criminal damage and violent disorder.
Following a months-long trial Leona Kamio, 30, Samuel Corner, 23, Fatema Rajwani, 21, Zoe Rogers, 22, Jordan Devlin, 31, and Charlotte Head, 29, were acquitted of charges of aggravated burglary but jurors failed to return verdicts on a number of counts including criminal damage.
Jurors additionally acquitted Devlin, Rogers and Rajwani of violent disorder, but did not return verdicts on the same charge for Head, Corner and Kamio.
The jury was also hung on charges of criminal damage, and a charge faced by Corner of grievous bodily harm with intent for allegedly striking a police officer with a sledgehammer.
All six defendants face charges of criminal damage.
Kamio, Corner and Head also face charges of violent disorder.
Five of the defendants were granted bail at a hearing following the verdict, but Corner was remanded in custody.
They were held for around 18 months on remand - in excess of standard UK pre-trial custody time limits of six months.