TRANSCRIPT:
On a dark and stormy night in September 2023, Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers set out with a chainsaw to bring down a tree in the British county of Northumberland.
But it wasn't just any tree - it was the Sycamore Gap tree, which stood at the centre of a dramatic dip in the landscape alongside the historic World Heritage Listed Hadrian's Wall in northern England, and estimated to be around 200 years old.
The sycamore even featured in the 1991 film Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.
"Azeem, the great wood. I am home."
Both men were each convicted of two counts of criminal damage in May.
The pair have now been jailed by Judge Christina Lambert for what prosecutors called their act of "mindless destruction".
"Mr Daniel Graham, Mr Adam Carruthers, I pass the same sentence in respect of you. The sentence is on count one, four years and three months imprisonment."
Both denied any involvement in the felling of the tree at first but evidence to the court placed both of them at the scene - which included footage on Graham's mobile phone of a tree being chainsawed in the dead of night.
The court also heard the pair had bragged about what they'd done.
Neither man has explained why they did it, though Carruthers' lawyer Andrew Gurney described it as "drunken stupidity".
The Judge didn't accept that, ruling that it was clearly deliberate and premeditated over a tree that was beloved in the community and known across the world.
"For those who live in Northumberland or who love this county, the tree had become a landmark, a symbol of the beauty of its untamed landscape, featuring prominently in local art and local tourism. For others, the tree had become a place, a special personal significance where marriages were proposed and personal tributes to loved ones were left. It was, as Mr Poad (NATIONAL TRUST MANAGER ANDREW POAD WHO GAVE EVIDENCE) observes, a place of peace and tranquillity to which people returned year after year."
The Sycamore Gap tree's destruction was met with fury and dismay across the UK, as these residents told the BBC.
WOMAN: "Very sad. It makes you wonder why this has happened."
MAN: "It was anger initially. When I found out that it was actually malicious - like a malicious act that caused it - now it's just sad."
Reaction to the sentence has been mixed.
Some say the prison sentence should have been even harsher.
MAN: "Terrible to be honest. Yeah, yeah. Terrible. Should have got a lot more..."
WOMAN: "The sentence reflects public disgust and anger."
Others believe the punishment should have been tailored to fit the crime.
"I'm not sure putting them in prison is the right thing to do. I just think community service, just spending a long, long time planting trees, particularly in weather like this..."
Meanwhile, work to save what's left of the iconic tree goes on.
Last week, the Northumberland National Park said the largest part of the tree would go on display in an installation located not far from where it once stood.
And the National Trust, a heritage conservation charity which looks after the site, has collected twigs and seeds from around the base, in the hopes of promoting regrowth.
It said last August there were signs of life at the base, giving hope it might live on.