Two men in their 30s were arrested and released on bail on Tuesday in connection with the felling of the Sycamore Gap tree, the latest development in the investigation into who chopped down one of Britain’s most photographed trees, which had stood for two centuries in a dip in Hadrian’s Wall.
The two additional arrests brought the total number of suspects to four, according to the Northumbria Police.
A 16-year-old boy and a farmer in his 60s, arrested in September, were also out on bail.
The Sycamore Gap tree, about 100 miles southeast of Edinburgh, was cut down overnight between Sept. 27 and 28, during a storm with 60-mile-an-hour winds in what the police described as “a deliberate act of vandalism.” Reports of the destruction of the tree, which was featured in the 1991 film “Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves,” led to an outpouring of emotion, both by those in England’s northeast and by international tourists.
Persons:
Robin Hood :, ”
Organizations:
Northumbria Police
Locations:
Wall, Northumbria, Edinburgh