Almost eight months following Mr. George's arrest, the Dando trial began at the Old Bailey with a bumpy start. Four days after arguments began with prosecutor Orlando Pownall QC and defense attorney Michael Mansfield QC, the proceedings were adjourned by Mr. Justice Gage for unknown reasons. Legal arguments resumed during the last week of April 2001 but were once again delayed until the first week of May. Finally on May 4, 2001, the trial began again with the prosecution building up its case against Mr. George before a jury of seven women and five men. It was the beginning of a trial that would span five weeks and captivate news audiences worldwide.

found in George's apartment
(BBC News)

Barry Georges residence
(BBC News)

George's apartment
(BBC News)
Jurors also learned that although Mr. George had claimed not to have known of Jill Dando, he had displayed enormous sympathy for her following her death. Mr. Pownall said that a member of the local council had remembered Mr. George saying that a memorial should be built for the murdered television presenter and that the defendant had actively sought letters of condolence following her death. During an interview with a journalist on the Dando case, Mr. George claimed to have watched Jill Dando on the {Crimewatch} television series and was quoted as saying that he thought her to be, "a lovely lady." Prosecutor Pownall told the jury that the journalist's account contradicted a statement Mr. George had given the police. An even more compelling account linking Mr. George to the Dando murder case came from a witness named Sally Mason. Mason had been an acquaintance of Mr. George for 15 years. During a conversation with Mason about the murder of Dando, the defendant had remarked to her that he had indeed been there, although he had claimed on other occasions to police to not have been.



