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Mark Duggan shooting: Hutchinson-Foster guilty of supplying gun Mark Duggan shooting: Hutchinson-Foster guilty of supplying gun
(35 minutes later)
A man has been found guilty of supplying a gun to Mark Duggan, who was shot dead by police.A man has been found guilty of supplying a gun to Mark Duggan, who was shot dead by police.
Mr Duggan, 29, was shot by officers in Tottenham, north London, on 4 August 2011 and a gun was found nearby, Snaresbrook Crown Court heard. Mr Duggan, 29, was shot by officers in Tottenham, north London, on 4 August 2011 and a gun was found nearby, a trial at the Old Bailey heard.
Kevin Hutchinson-Foster, 30, had denied selling or transferring a prohibited firearm to Mr Duggan.Kevin Hutchinson-Foster, 30, had denied selling or transferring a prohibited firearm to Mr Duggan.
Mr Duggan's death sparked riots in Tottenham, which led to disorder in a number of English cities and towns.Mr Duggan's death sparked riots in Tottenham, which led to disorder in a number of English cities and towns.
During the trial the jury heard Mr Duggan collected the BBM Bruni Model 92 handgun just 15 minutes before he was killed. During the trial the jury heard Mr Duggan collected the BBM Bruni Model 92 handgun in a shoebox just 15 minutes before he was killed.
Prosecutor Edward Brown QC told the court: "The death of Mr Duggan has been regarded as the event that sparked the riots in north London, which then spread across London and then to other cities and which attracted widespread publicity in the United Kingdom and abroad."
'Cannabis'
He told the jury it was not their task to decide the "rights and wrongs" of Mr Duggan's shooting, which will be examined at the inquest into his death, set to take place in September.
Hutchinson-Foster has admitted using the same gun to beat barber Peter Osadebay at a barber's shop in Dalston, east London, just six days before Mr Duggan's death.
The defendant, a cannabis user with convictions for possession of cocaine and heroin with intent to supply, claimed Mr Duggan had wanted his help to sell some cannabis.
He said that was why his DNA was found on the gun when it was retrieved from Ferry Lane on 4 August, along with traces of Mr Osadebay's blood.
Armed police, who gave evidence anonymously, described how they had opened fire on Mr Duggan on Ferry Lane because they saw him get out of a taxi holding a loaded gun.Armed police, who gave evidence anonymously, described how they had opened fire on Mr Duggan on Ferry Lane because they saw him get out of a taxi holding a loaded gun.
The officer responsible for the two shots that fatally wounded Mr Duggan said: "I had an honest-held belief that Mark Duggan was going to shoot me or one of my colleagues, so I brought my MP5 (sub-machine gun) up to the shooting position."The officer responsible for the two shots that fatally wounded Mr Duggan said: "I had an honest-held belief that Mark Duggan was going to shoot me or one of my colleagues, so I brought my MP5 (sub-machine gun) up to the shooting position."
The officer, known only as V53, shot Mr Duggan in the chest and arm.The officer, known only as V53, shot Mr Duggan in the chest and arm.
He told the jury: "Mark Duggan then fell to the floor. I then closed the suspect down."He told the jury: "Mark Duggan then fell to the floor. I then closed the suspect down."
'Hard stop'
The court heard that Mr Duggan had been under police surveillance before the shooting.The court heard that Mr Duggan had been under police surveillance before the shooting.
A taxi driver, who also gave evidence anonymously, collected Mr Duggan from Hoxton, east London, and took him to an address in Leyton, where he saw his passenger collect a box from another man.
Asked if he could remember the events clearly, the taxi driver said: "It was such an incident that a person cannot forget about these things, even at night."
He detailed the "hard stop" carried out by police, who surrounded the cab, forcing it to halt.
Police descended on the halted minicab and the driver said he saw his passenger get out and run, followed by the gun shots.
The court heard that the driver was was pulled from his cab and and forced to lie face-down on the ground with his hands tied behind his back, where he saw Mr Duggan's body lying nearby.
The driver said: "His mouth was open.
"He was bleeding from the front. They were trying to remove his clothes."