Ukrainian man, novel Lavrynovych, appears in court about fires at Keir Starmer’s Properties
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A Ukrainian man appeared on Friday in a court in London, charged with setting fires on two property and a car linked to the British Prime Minister, Keir Starmer.
Roman Lavrynovych, 21, from Sydenham, in southeastern London, was accused of three counts of arson “with the intention of threatening life” after the fires in North London.
Mr Lavrynovych, who was arrested on Tuesday, only spoke briefly and via an interpreter to confirm his name, address and date of birth.
Sarah Przybylska, the public prosecutor, told the hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court that “the car and both property were connected to the prime minister.” She added that at this stage: “The alleged offensive is inexplicable.”
Mr Lavrynovych will be held on 6 June to a hearing until a hearing in the Central Criminal Court of London, known as the old Bailey.
One of the fires broke out on Monday morning outside the doorway of the family home of Mr. Starmer in the Kentish Town district, where he and his family lived until last year when they moved to the official home in Downing Street 10.
Another eruption broke out the day before on a house in the Islington area, while the third episode on 8 May was a car hour in Kentish Town.
The BBC reported that Mr Starmer had lived in the ownership of Islington in the 1990s and that the car was owned by him before it was sold to a neighbor. Nobody was injured in the fire, but the doorway of the Kentish Town House, which is currently being rented, was damaged.
The police of the fight against terrorism led the investigation because of the connections with a controversial public figure.
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