Police arrested Ashley Dale’s suspected killers at Glastonbury festival weeks before fatal shooting
The environmental health worker was shot in the abdomen at her home in Liverpool
Jurors have been shown the moment police officers arrested an environmental health worker’s suspected killers near Glastonbury festival weeks before her death.
Ashley Dale was hit in the abdomen by a bullet when gunman James Witham, 41, kicked down the door of her home in Old Swan, Liverpool, on August 21 last year, his trial at Liverpool Crown Court heard on Monday.
The court was told two months earlier in June, the group of men was pulled over by the police and found with a flick knife, after a dispute between two rival factions erupted at the music festival.
Witham has admitted her manslaughter but he and four other men – Niall Barry, 26, Sean Zeisz, 28, Ian Fitzgibbon, 28, Joseph Peers, 29 – deny Miss Dale’s murder.
According to messages Miss Dale sent to friends in the weeks before her death, the man accused of her murder is said to have threatened to shoot her boyfriend.
The court heard she had expressed concerns about her partner Lee Harrison attending a funeral and wake for friend Rikki Warnick, who died in July last year, because Barry, known as Branch, may also be there.
Miss Dale and Barry both attended the wake on August 10 but Mr Harrison did not, the trial head.
The court was shown messages Miss Dale sent to friends on August 12, in which she discussed another friend who had been standing with Barry.
She said: “Like not being funny but you’re meant to be my mate and my fella hasn’t come coz he’s saying he’s gonna shoot him.
“So he hasn’t come coz he doesn’t want the trouble for Rikki’s mum.”
The trial has heard Barry and Mr Harrison had “heavy beef” for years, according to Miss Dale, and the feud was reignited when both attended Glastonbury in June last year.
In messages to her friend Mol on 1 August, Miss Dale said: “I don’t want to have to go to Lee’s funeral next and I just have a bad, bad feeling about everything.
“Me nerves are gone, when am out in the car with Lee just feeling like I’m looking over me shoulder all the time.”
In voice notes played to the court, Miss Dale told another friend she had asked Mr Harrison to be “honest about everything” so she could prepare for “the worst”.
She added: “I don’t normally want to know but I need to know what’s going to happen.”
In the messages, she said Mr Harrison did not want the feud and would “squash it” if Mr Barry wanted to.
She added: “Lee could end up in jail or whatever, like, worse.”
The jury was shown photos recovered from Miss Dale’s phone following her death which showed some of the defendants with her and Mr Harrison.
In one photo Miss Dale and Mr Harrison posed with Witham as he made the peace sign.
Detective Constable Lauren Hunter told the court it was not clear when the photos had been taken.
The prosecution allege Miss Dale died after Barry, Zeisz and Fitzgibbon dispatched “foot soldiers” Witham and Peers armed with a Skorpion sub-machine gun to kill Miss Dale’s boyfriend, Lee Harrison, at his home and “to deal with anyone that got in their way, leaving behind no witnesses”.
Miss Dale was at the couple’s home alone when the attack happened.
Witham, of Huyton; Fitzgibbon, of St Helens; Zeisz of Huyton; Barry, of Tuebrook; and Peers, of Roby – all Merseyside – deny conspiracy to murder Mr Harrison and conspiracy to possess a prohibited weapon, a Skorpion sub-machine gun, and ammunition, as well as the murder of Miss Dale.
Kallum Radford, 26, of no fixed address, denies assisting an offender.
The trial, expected to last six to eight weeks, continues.
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