A man who left a bag of wires and an iPad outside the US embassy in London for ‘graffiti art’ has been cleared of making a bomb hoax.
The embassy went into lockdown, and bomb disposal experts were called after the suspicious package was found on the morning of November 22 last year.
Daniel Parmenter, 44, denied intending to cause alarm and claimed that staff at the embassy would know it was not an explosive device.
Parmenter, from Bayswater, west London, was found not guilty of placing an article with intent at the Old Bailey today.
The verdict was delivered in Parmenter’s absence in the dock as he had ‘misunderstood’ and gone home earlier on Thursday after the jury retired.
His barrister, Rabah Kherbane, told the court that he had spoken to his client who had been on bail and was cycling back to court.
‘He completely misunderstood. He is riding back as quickly as he can. I can hear the wind in his earphones. He did sound genuinely shocked on the phone,’ Kherbane said.
Prosecutor Lucy Organ previously told the court how Parmenter had left a suspicious item in an alleyway by the embassy in Nine Elms, south-west London, at around 6am.
At 8.30am, a civilian guard for the US embassy was on a routine patrol when she noticed what she thought looked like a bomb and ‘panicked’, Ms Organ said.
She backed away, took a photograph of the suspected bomb and returned to the embassy to raise the alarm.
A police officer on duty at the embassy saw the photograph and walked down the alleyway where he saw a drum, some photo frames, and a large metal tray with writing and a skull and crossbones on it, jurors were told.
Ms Organ said: ‘Next to all of this on the floor next to the wall was what appeared to be an IED, it was an old-style iPad with a keypad and firework wires all taped.’
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A cordon was put in place, local roads were closed and the US embassy went into lockdown, the court was told.
Three bomb disposal officers attended the scene and carried out a controlled explosion.
The objects said to be left by the defendant included a piece of paper with ‘Danger Chemicals’ written on it. There was a book of Wondercrump poetry in a frame and a red picture frame containing assorted items, including tools and a first aid kit, the court heard.
A box of dates was also found marked for the attention of the US Navy with the words ‘Do not X-ray, please inspect. Radiation. Hazard.’
An examination of CCTV from the area led to the identification and arrest of Parmenter at the home he shares with his mother two days later.
On being arrested on suspicion of planting a device at the US embassy, the defendant replied, ‘I did’ even before the officer had finished speaking.
Parmenter, who has autism spectrum disorder, denied meaning any harm, saying: ‘It is basically a form of slightly sophisticated graffiti art of the non-vandal type. This is basically an art object, well, two art objects.’
The defendant’s basement flat had more items, including a green military-style rucksack on the sofa, and what appeared to be a cross between a petrol bomb and a pipe bomb.
Explosives officers were called and determined it was not a viable device.
After the parcel was X-rayed and declared safe, it was found to contain a Notting Hill Carnival book, a safety pin, half a bar of chocolate and various jar lids.
Parmenter conceded that the items may, to the untrained eye, look like a suspicious device, but it was never intended that way.
He told police he had left other gifts at places on Halloween, saying on that occasion he gave the US embassy a framed print relating to 9/11.
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