TL;DR
Keir Starmer's sister-in-law testified in court about an arson attack on her home, expressing fear over the potential consequences had she not woken up. Three men, linked to Ukraine, are accused of the attack but deny the charges.
The prime minister’s sister-in-law has said she feared what might have happened had she not woken up after her home was targeted in an arson attack, a court has heard.
The incident is one of a series of arson attacks that took place in May last year on property linked to Keir Starmer, which three men with links to Ukraine are accused of targeting. They deny all the charges.
Roman Lavrynovych, 22, and Petro Pochynok, 35, both from Ukraine, and Stanislav Carpiuc, 27, a Romanian national, appeared at the Old Bailey on the second day of their trial as jurors heard how Judith Alexander became aware of the fire in the early hours of 12 May last year.
“All of a sudden, I heard two bangs. It was very loud and sounded like two wheelie bins had been thrown at the door,” said a statement read to the court. “I did not see anyone on the street but when I looked down I saw smoke and an orange glow where the front door was.”
Alexander told the court she had moved into the Kentish Town property in north London in 2024, after Starmer moved to Downing Street. Before the fire had broken out, she had been lying awake in bed on her phone as her partner and daughter slept.
The court heard how Alexander called the fire brigade and attempted to “frantically” call her sister Victoria, Starmer’s wife. Her daughter’s bedroom was near the fire and she was woken up by the smoke, the statement said. Alexander gave them all Covid masks to wear.
“We could see the smoke was getting thicker and going upstairs,” said Alexander, and described her daughter as “really frightened” and “extremely worried”. Alexander has asthma and struggled to breathe as the house filled with smoke, the court heard.
It was only after the fire brigade had attended that the “realisation of what happened really hit me,” she added. “The fact that [my daughter’s] room was right above the fire and if I did not wake up, what might have happened. I was awake all night.”
The incident followed two others that occurred last May, when police were called to a fire at a house in Islington, north London, connected to Starmer and a blaze involving a car that also once belonged to the prime minister.
Lavrynovych faces three counts of arson with intent to endanger life or being reckless as to whether life would be endangered. Pochynok and Carpiuc are also accused of conspiracy to commit arson.
The court heard the 22-year-old was arrested in south London on 13 May last year. During a search, a petrol can and a bottle of white spirit were seized and were found to have the defendant’s DNA on them.
In a police interview after his arrest, Lavrynovych denied being involved in the fires and claimed he was at home on the dates of the first two incidents and visiting a friend in Camden on the third, according to the prosecution. When asked if someone had asked him to start the fires, Lavrynovych said: “I think you need to speak to a different person.”