UK pro-Palestinian activists found guilty of criminal damage in Elbit factory raid

Supporters of alleged Palestine Action activists who broke into Israeli-based defense firm Elbit Systems' site in Bristol in August 2024 outside Woolwich Crown Court during a hearing in the case last year. (AFP)
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Updated 05 May 2026
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UK pro-Palestinian activists found guilty of criminal damage in Elbit factory raid

  • Prosecutors said the Palestine Action members attacked a factory operated by Israeli defense firm Elbit in 2024
  • The raid, which caused about £1 million of damage, took place around 10 months into Israel’s bombardment of Gaza

LONDON: Four British pro-Palestinian activists were on Tuesday convicted of criminal damage relating to a ​2024 raid on a factory operated by Israeli defense firm Elbit, with one of the defendants found guilty of hitting a police officer with a sledgehammer.
Prosecutors at London’s Woolwich Crown Court said the six defendants were members of the banned group Palestine ‌Action, which organized the ‌assault on the Elbit ​Systems ‌UK ⁠facility ​in Bristol, southwest ⁠England, in August 2024.
The raid, which prosecutors said caused about £1 million ($1.36 million) of damage, took place around 10 months into Israel’s bombardment of Gaza in response to a deadly attack by Hamas-led fighters in October ⁠2023.
Palestine Action was later proscribed ‌under terrorism law, a decision ‌which was ruled unlawful ​by London’s High Court ‌though the group remains banned pending the ‌government’s appeal, which was heard last week.
The six defendants – Charlotte Head, 30, Samuel Corner, 23, Leona Kamio, 30, Fatema Zainab Rajwani, 21, Zoe Rogers, 22, ‌and Jordan Devlin, 31 – had all denied charges of criminal damage.
Head, Corner, ⁠Kamio and ⁠Rajwani were found guilty of the offense, while Rogers and Devlin were found not guilty.
Corner, who prosecutors said hit a police officer with a sledgehammer, was convicted of inflicting grievous bodily harm.
Tuesday’s verdicts follow an earlier trial, after which all six defendants were acquitted of aggravated burglary and the previous jury could not reach verdicts on the ​criminal damage charges.
Prosecutors later ​dropped charges of violent disorder against all six defendants.