A council worker was shot dead after a row at Glastonbury music festival reignited a feud, a court has heard.
Ashley Dale, 28, was hit in the abdomen by a bullet fired from a machine gun at her home in Liverpool on 21 August last year.
Opening the trial of the five men accused of her murder at Liverpool Crown Court on Thursday, Paul Greaney KC said: “There can, suggests the prosecution, be no doubt that Ashley’s death was murder.
“She was shot deliberately and, indeed, mercilessly by a man who entered her home intending to kill.”
He told the court Miss Dale had attended Glastonbury festival in June 2022 with her boyfriend Lee Harrison.
Four of the men accused of her murder – Sean Zeisz, 28, Niall Barry, 26, Ian Fitzgibbon, 28 and James Witham, 41 – were also present at the festival.
The jury heard Zeisz was assaulted at Glastonbury and his attackers included a man called Jordan Thompson.
Ashley Dale killing: Two more men charged with murder of council worker in Liverpool
Third man charged with murdering council worker Ashley Dale in Liverpool
Ashley Dale killing: Two men arrested on suspicion of murdering council worker in Liverpool
Following the assault, Zeisz’s girlfriend Olivia McDowell stayed with Mr Thompson, Miss Dale and Mr Harrison, compounding Zeisz’s “loss of face”, Mr Greaney added.
The court heard that in the following weeks, Barry sided with Zeisz as he already had a “longstanding antagonism” towards Mr Harrison, who Mr Greaney said appeared to be involved in a “world of criminality”.
Mr Greaney continued: “Niall Barry used these new events at Glastonbury to reignite that old feud.”
He said that on August 20, Fitzgibbon, Zeisz and Barry dispatched “foot soldiers” Witham and the fifth defendant – Joseph Peers, 29 – armed with a Skorpion sub-machine gun to kill Mr Harrison at his home and “to deal with anyone that got in their way, leaving behind no witnesses”.
Miss Dale, whose family members wiped away tears at times during the opening, was at the couple’s home on Leinster Road with her dog on the night of the attack, while Mr Harrison was out.
The jury was told Witham admitted the manslaughter of Miss Dale, but said he shot her by accident in the early hours of 21 August having gone to “send a message” to Mr Harrison following a dispute about drug dealing in North Wales.
Mr Greaney said: “It was James Witham who forced the front door to Leinster Road, James Witham who entered the house and James Witham who proceeded to open fire on Ashley, shooting and killing her.
“James Witham then walked upstairs and into a bedroom, where he fired five bullets into the wall. He did that, the prosecution suggests, to send a firm message to Lee Harrison. That message was that he, Lee Harrison, had been the principal target of this attack and he too should be dead, along with Ashley.”
The court heard Peers drove the gunman to Miss Dale’s address in a Hyundai.
All five deny murdering Miss Dale and also deny conspiracy to murder Lee Harrison and conspiracy to possess a prohibited weapon, a Skorpion sub-machine gun, and ammunition.
A sixth defendant, Kallum Radford, 25, denies assisting an offender.