Two groundworkers have been found guilty of cutting down Britain’s most famous tree.
Daniel Graham, 39, and Adam Carruthers, 32, face up to ten years in prison for felling the Sycamore Gap tree and causing damage to Hadrian’s Wall in the process.
Jurors found the pair guilty after their friendship degenerated and they blamed each other for the felling of the tree. The verdicts were delivered after five hours of deliberations.
The pair, both from Cumbria, filmed themselves felling the iconic landmark during a ‘moronic mission’ in the early hours of September 28, 2023.
They had driven through a storm for 30 miles before one of them cut down the sycamore with a chainsaw as the other filmed it. Carruthers then forwarded the video to his partner while they drove away from the scene.
The following morning, when news broke of the vandalism, the pair shared social media posts about the tree with Graham saying to Carruthers ‘here we go,’ as they ‘revelled’ in news reports about their ‘moronic mission’.
They were each found guilty of two counts of criminal damage – one to the much-photographed tree and and one to Hadrian’s Wall, which was damaged when the sycamore fell on it.
Both defendants stared straight ahead and showed little emotion as the guilty verdicts were read to the court. Carruthers sat with hands clasped in front of him, while Graham lifted a hand to his face and stroked his beard.

Groundworker Daniel Graham (left), 39, and mechanic Adam Carruthers (right), 32, had denied two counts of criminal damage in relation to the tree and Hadrian’s Wall

The Sycamore Gap tree fell onto Hadrian’s Wall when it was cut down. The tree was made famous by actor Kevin Costner when it appeared in his 1991 film Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves.

The 150-year-old sycamore was felled in 2023 in an act which stunned the nation


Grabs from an enhanced version of mobile phone footage showing the Sycamore Gap being felled in September 2023, which was shown at Newcastle Crown Court

A court sketch of Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers appearing in the dock at Newcastle Magistrates’ Court

The Sycamore Gap tree is pictured here in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves with Kevin Costner
A man named Kevin Hartness posted about the tree on Facebook, writing: ‘Some weak people that walk this earth; disgusting behaviour.’
Carruthers sent this post to Graham, and later sent a voice note in which he said: ‘I’d like to see Kevin Hartness launch an operation like we did last night… I don’t think he’s got the minerals.’
In August last year, Graham made an anonymous phone call to the police in an attempt to implicate his friend and save himself.
Officers instantly recognised his voice as he told them that ‘one of the lads that [did] it, Adam Carruthers,’ had taken his chainsaws back home.
The ‘anonymous caller’ said if police searched Carruthers’ home and workshop they would find the saws and part of the felled tree, along with a shotgun and a pistol.
No firearms, chainsaws or the tree wedge were found, however.
On December 1, 2024, days before the trial was originally scheduled to begin, Graham took to Facebook to accuse Carruthers of felling the tree, posting a series of images of his former friend.
‘I truly would not do it,’ he wrote.
‘It’s my picture everywhere. Well, here’s a picture of the man with [the] hidden face.’
In a tense exchange with Mr Wright during his cross examination, Graham tried to justify turning on his friend.
He said Carruthers and an associate had tried to intimidate him into taking the blame for cutting down the tree, insisting that the criminal justice system would be lenient towards him due to his mental health issues.
He added: ‘If someone is costing me money and affecting my business then I will f***ing grass. ‘No doubt about it he [Carruthers] is the one holding the chainsaw. Adam felled the tree, I don’t know 100 per cent who the other person was.
‘I was annoyed about my business suffering through his actions.’

An image found on Daniel Graham’s phone of a chainsaw and wedge from the tree in the boot of his car

Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers, pictured working together. The relationship between the pair has evidently broken down since

A photograph that was shown to the jury during the trial, showing a collection of chainsaws

The Sycamore Gap featured in the 1991 blockbuster Robin Hood Prince of Thieves (pictured) starring Kevin Costner and Morgan Freeman

Costner, who plays the protagonist, and Freeman, who plays warrior Azeem, visit the tree in the movie

Police vehicles near the location of the tree next to Hadrian’s Wall the day after it was cut down

Graham, pictured, tried to justify turning on his friend

Graham and Carruthers, seen here in a court sketch, were arrested in connection with the felling of the tree in October 2023

Graham (pictured) insisted that Carruthers and an accomplice had taken his car, with his phone inside, and driven to the Sycamore Gap without his knowledge while he had been sleeping in his caravan

Adam Carruthers now faces up to ten years in prison

Adam Carruthers outside Newcastle Crown Court this morning

Part of the tree had been marked with white paint, indicating the culprits felled it with a chainsaw
To explain away number plate and phone site evidence against him, Graham insisted that Carruthers and an accomplice had taken his car, with his phone inside, and driven to the Sycamore Gap without his knowledge while he had been sleeping in his caravan.
Carruthers, for his part, did not directly accuse Graham of being involved in felling the tree.
But he insisted that on the evening the tree was felled he had tried to take his partner and young children for a meal at the Metrocentre in Gateshead but turned back because their 11-day-old baby was unsettled.
Jurors rejected these flimsy alibis and found the pair unanimously guilty of causing criminal damage worth £622,191 to the tree and £1,144 worth of damage to Hadrian’s Wall, a Unesco world heritage site owned by the National Trust.
They now face up to ten years in prison.