The prosecution in the unprecedented Egyptian trial of reporters, including Australian Peter Greste, has submitted footage and pictures as evidence against the defendants.
Greste and his two Al Jazeera colleagues and 17 others are on trial for alleged links to the blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood movement.
They have been in detention for more than 100 days, despite an international outcry and amid fears of a crackdown on the media following the army's overthrow of Egypt's Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in July.
The court on Thursday studied prosecution charges that the defendants had misrepresented Egypt's political crisis in their broadcasts.
The court was shown seemingly random pictures found in the possession of Greste, including one of his elderly parents.
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Greste, a Peabody Award-winning journalist who previously worked with the BBC, laughed from inside his caged dock.
"Today, and all the other hearings, prove that the case completely fell apart," Greste told AFP from the dock.
Vision was aired from the British channel Sky News's Arabic affiliate, apparently found on a computer in the home of Al Jazeera producer and defendant Baher Mohamed.
It included a Sky News Arabia report on tourism in Egypt, with a horse munching on fodder in a stable in one scene.
Mohamed's brother Assem, who worked with Sky News Arabia and was attending the trial in the gallery, told an AFP journalist the footage came from his own laptop, taken by police from his and Mohamed's house.
Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fadel Fahmy, the Cairo bureau chief of Al Jazeera English, pleaded for an end to his imprisonment.
"I've been in jail for four months," he yelled out.
"What am I paying the price for? There is no strong evidence against us. These are all Sky News videos. What am I doing in prison," he told the judge, who adjourned the trial to April 22.
The latest hearing was the fifth in a case which has prompted mounting international calls for the release of the journalists.
Eight defendants, in white prison-issue uniforms, were in court on Thursday, while the others are abroad or have evaded arrest.
The authorities have been incensed by Qatar-based Al Jazeera's coverage of their crackdown on Morsi supporters which, according to Amnesty, has seen more than 1,400 people killed and thousands jailed.
The court on March 31 rejected a bail plea by the defendants.
In the trial, 16 Egyptian defendants have been charged with belonging to a "terrorist organisation".
Four foreigners are accused of "collaborating with the Egyptians by providing them with money, equipment, information ... and airing false news aimed at informing the outside world that the country was witnessing a civil war".

