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2025 Liverpool parade incident

2020s in Liverpool2020s vehicle-ramming attacks2025 in England2025 road incidents in EuropeCommons category link is locally defined
Liverpool F.C.May 2025 in the United KingdomRoad incidents in EnglandUse British English from May 2025Vehicle-ramming attacks in the United KingdomViolence in England
Liverpool parade incident CCTV
Liverpool parade incident CCTV

On 26 May 2025, a motorist drove a grey Ford Galaxy into a crowd on Water Street in Liverpool, England, during a victory parade celebrating Liverpool Football Club's 2024–25 Premier League title win. Over 130 people were injured; at least fifty were taken to hospital, including four children. Merseyside Police arrested a 53-year-old white British man at the scene and issued seven charges: one count of dangerous driving; two counts of unlawful and malicious wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm; two counts of causing unlawful and malicious grievous bodily harm with intent to cause grievous bodily harm; and two counts of attempted unlawful and malicious grievous bodily harm with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. He appeared at Liverpool Crown Court on 30 May and was remanded in custody until 14 August, when he will return to court to enter a plea before his possible trial in November.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 2025 Liverpool parade incident (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

2025 Liverpool parade incident
Drury Lane, Liverpool Vauxhall

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Wikipedia: 2025 Liverpool parade incidentContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.4062 ° E -2.9935 °
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Drury Lane

Drury Lane
L2 0AA Liverpool, Vauxhall
England, United Kingdom
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Liverpool parade incident CCTV
Liverpool parade incident CCTV
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Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City
Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City

Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City is a former UNESCO designated World Heritage Site in Liverpool, England, that comprised six locations in the city centre including the Pier Head, Albert Dock and William Brown Street, and many of the city's most famous landmarks. UNESCO received Liverpool City Council's nomination for the six sites in 2003 and sent ICOMOS representatives to carry out an evaluation on the eligibility for these areas to be given World Heritage Site status. In 2004, ICOMOS recommended that UNESCO should award Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City World Heritage Site status. Its inclusion by UNESCO was attributed to it being "the supreme example of a commercial port at a time of Britain's greatest global influence."In 2012, the site was added to the List of World Heritage in Danger due to the proposed Liverpool Waters project. In 2017, UNESCO warned that the site's status as a World Heritage Site was at risk of being revoked in light of contemporary development plans, with English Heritage asserting that the Liverpool Waters development would leave the setting of some of Liverpool's most significant historic buildings "severely compromised", the archaeological remains of parts of the historic docks "at risk of destruction", and "the city's historic urban landscape [...] permanently unbalanced."In 2021, Liverpool City Council's planning committee approved Everton F.C.'s new £500m football stadium in Bramley-Moore Dock, within Liverpool Waters. This decision was ratified by the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, Robert Jenrick. Following this, UNESCO's World Heritage Committee voted to revoke the site's World Heritage status.