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Ryan Routh begins self-defense in attempted Trump assassination trial

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Minutes into his opening statement, Ryan Routh, the man accused of trying to assassinate Donald Trump last September, was forced by the judge to end his remarks.

Introductory statements are typically used to preview evidence and arguments for the rest of trial. But Mr Routh’s were dedicated to his philosophical musings on intent, the history of human evolution, the “need to be kind to one another,” and beauty found in “hearthstones worn smooth” by generations of children.

He invoked Adolf Hitler and Vladimir Putin, and declared, “Modern trials seem to eliminate all that is human.”

US District Judge Aileen Cannon interrupted Mr Routh three times to remind him of proper procedure and reprimand him for “making a mockery of this court.” At one point, she excused the jury while she chastised him, before finally suspending his remarks entirely.

His truncated opening statements and frequent rebukes from the judge set the stage for an unusual — and at times uncomfortable — first day of trial, during which the government questioned five witnesses and Mr Routh struggled to mount a coherent defense.

Mr Routh, 59, is charged with five crimes including attempted assassination of a major presidential candidate, and has chosen to represent himself. He has pleaded not guilty.

For the prosecution, attorney John Shipley Jr said in his opening remarks that by trying to assassinate Trump in the midst of the 2024 election, Routh “decided to take the choice away from the American people.”

“This plot was carefully crafted and deadly serious,” Mr Shipley added.

“This case is not about whether you like Donald Trump or not,” Mr Shipley told the jury. Instead, it was about whether Routh plotted to kill him.

Cellphone data, security footage, a handwritten note by Routh stating an intention to kill Trump, plus eyewitness testimony would prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt, Mr Shipley said.

The first witness, Robert Fercano, was a member of Trump’s Secret Service detail. He testified how he discovered a man hiding on the perimeter of Trump’s West Palm Beach golf course last September.

Mr Fercano testified that while patrolling the perimeter near the sixth hole of the golf course, he saw a face, armored plates, and what appeared to be the muzzle of an AK-style weapon poking through the fence. He identified the man he discovered there as Mr Routh who sat alone watching from the defense table wearing a gray blazer and blue tie.

After calling, “Hey, sir,” Mr Fercano said the man groaned and “smiled at me.” But he soon noticed armor plating on the fence and realised a weapon was pointed “directly” at him. He called for backup and began to move away while reporting the man.

Jurors heard audio of Mr Fercano radioing colleagues after he discharged his weapon in Mr Routh’s direction: “Shots fired! Shots fired! Shots fired!”

At prosecutors’ request, the agent stood before the jury holding the SKS semiautomatic rifle they allege Mr Routh obtained illegally and tried to use in the assassination attempt.

Shortly after, Mr Routh began his cross-examination.

“Is it good to be alive?” he asked the agent. He then asked a series of questions about the most likely position a person might assume if they were “a bad guy trying to obscure myself.”

“I do know you pointed the weapon at my face,” Mr Fercano told Mr Routh in response to questions about the positioning of the weapon.

Next, prosecutors questioned Florida resident Tommy McGee, who said he saw a man he identified as Mr Routh fleeing the scene.

After hearing gunshots from the road outside the golf course, Mr McGee, a mental health professional, told the jury he “saw a man coming out of the bushes” looking “dishevelled, unkempt, and frantic.”

As the man ran across the road in front of Mr McGee’s vehicle, “we looked right at each other,” he said.

Mr McGee said he decided to make a U-turn and follow the man. He ultimately captured an image of the car Mr Routh allegedly used to flee, and followed the vehicle to take down the license plate number.

Authorities used that information to locate Mr Routh’s vehicle heading northbound on Interstate 95, detained him, and flew Mr McGee there in a helicopter to identify him.

The jury viewed a dashcam video of Mr McGee in a law enforcement vehicle on 15 September 2024 as he identified the man police had detained on the highway as the man who ran in front of his car.

Rather than question Mr McGee during cross examinations, Mr Routh instead told him: “You’re my hero. You’re a good man.”

“I celebrate your efforts,” Mr Routh said.

Prosecutors called three more witnesses on Thursday: another US Secret Service agent who responded to the assassination attempt, and two FBI agents involved with holding and processing Mr Routh.

A man and a woman who identified themselves to the BBC as Mr Routh’s children watched the proceedings from the back of the courtroom.

'Why are yall sad?' Teachers, firefighters, officials on leave or fired over Charlie Kirk posts

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(NEXSTAR) – Teachers, firefighters, elected officials and even a cable news contributor have lost their jobs or are under investigation after comments they made about the assassination of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk.

Reports of teachers and school administrators around the country being put on leave proliferated Thursday less than 24 hours after Kirk’s death. School employees in Tennessee, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Mississippi, Ohio were all being investigated for posts made on social media.

At least one teacher in South Carolina was fired for a post about Kirk’s death that read: “Thoughts and prayers to his children but IMHO America became greater today. There I said it.”

A teacher and city councilor in Cornelius, Oregon, wrote the assassination “really brightened up my day,” landing him in hot water.

A public relations employee for the National Football League’s Carolina Panthers was terminated, according to The Athletic, after reportedly posting on his personal Instagram account: “Why are yall sad? Your man said it was worth it,” with an image of the Wu-Tang hit “Protect Ya Neck.”

Matthew Dowd, an MSNBC contributor, was also fired by the network for comments he made on the air during breaking news coverage on Wednesday.

“He was constantly pushing this sort of hate speech aimed at certain groups,” Dowd said, according to The Hill. “And I always go back to: Hateful thoughts lead to hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions. … You can’t say these awful words and not expect awful actions to take place.”

While Dowd’s comments were made live on-air with a large audience, some were made in more private channels but have been brought to light by right-wing activists, WIRED reports.

Laura Loomer, a conservative media personality with a large following, posted on X, “I will be spending my night making everyone I find online who celebrates his death Famous, so prepare to have your whole future professional aspirations ruined if you are sick enough to celebrate his death. I’m going to make you wish you never opened your mouth.”

Her social media feed Thursday was filled with the names, pictures and job titles of people who she said should be fired for comments they made following Kirk’s death.

Another far-right social media influencer, who posts under the account Libs of TikTok, was also on the case. A firefighter in New Orleans had posted an Instagram comment, which she later deleted, suggesting Kirk deserved to die and the bullet was “a gift from god.” But the deleted comment had been screenshotted and shared on Libs of TikTok, drawing the attention of the fire department’s superintendent and the Louisiana attorney general.

Kirk was shot while speaking at an event at Utah Valley University Wednesday afternoon. He was taken to the hospital where he died. As of Thursday afternoon, the suspect was still at large.

Jeremy Tanner contributed to this report.

US data center build hits record as AI demand surges, Bank of America Institute says

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(Reuters) -Construction spending on U.S. data centers reached an all-time high of $40 billion at a seasonally adjusted annual rate in June, as technology giants continue pouring billions into AI infrastructure, according to a Bank of America Institute report.

BY THE NUMBERS

The June figure represents a 30% increase from the previous year, following a 50% surge in 2024, the report said, citing U.S. Census Bureau data.

WHY IT’S IMPORTANT

The boom in generative AI and machine learning is fueling demand for computing power, prompting tech heavyweights including Microsoft, Alphabet and Amazon.com investing billions in setting up the infrastructure.

These hyperscalers have been spending billions to scale their operations to support AI workloads, creating a windfall for semiconductor companies like Nvidia , which supplies chips used in data centers and derives the bulk of its revenue from such sales.

KEY QUOTES

“Hyperscalers are a big part of the increased demand for power, but they’re not the whole picture,” Bank of America Institute economists led by Liz Everett Krisberg said in the report.

“In fact, most of the expected rise in U.S. electricity demand through 2030 is coming from things like electric vehicles (EVs), heating, industrial reshoring, and electrifying buildings.”

(Reporting by Shashwat Chauhan in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid)

More school-starters missing key skills like toilet training, teachers say

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Kate McGoughEducation reporter, BBC News

Getty Images Primary school students sitting in a classroom being taught by a teacher. The pupils are learning on mini whiteboards.Getty Images

Schools are “picking up the pieces” as more children start reception without key skills such as speaking in full sentences or using the toilet independently, teaching unions have told the BBC.

A third of teachers have at least five children in their school’s reception class who need help with going to the toilet, a survey of more than 1,000 primary school teachers in England suggests.

Nine in 10 who responded to the Teacher Tapp survey had seen a decrease in speech and language abilities among new starters over the past two years.

The government previously announced a target for 75% of children to be at a good level of development on leaving reception by 2028.

At St Mary’s Church of England Primary School in Stoke, speech and language therapist Liz Parkes is helping reception pupil Gracie sound out words that rhyme.

Liz comes to the school once a week to do one-to-one interventions like this, and to offer training and support to teachers on how to spot issues.

Around a quarter of pupils at St Mary’s need some extra support with speech and language when they join reception, but with Liz’s help that number is down to just a handful of pupils by Year 2.

Liz says social isolation is partly the reason for the decrease in communication skills.

“Children are increasingly spending a lot of time looking at a screen and not necessarily engaged in more meaningful interactions or developing the kind of listening skills you need when you hit nursery and reception.

“We’re seeing children in reception who haven’t experienced having conversations on a regular basis or aren’t having a range of experiences where they’re exposed to language.”

BBC/Kate McGough A blonde-haired little girl wearing purple school dress and cardigan sits at a table with a woman with long blonde hair and glasses wearing a brown top. The woman is point at a phonics card in front of the little girl with a picture of a strawberry on it. They are in the corner of a classroom with displays of words on the wall. BBC/Kate McGough

Speech and language therapist Liz Parkes supports reception pupil Gracie

Teacher Tapp, a survey tool, asked primary school teachers in England about school readiness a week into term. In results seen exclusively by BBC News, they found:

  • 85% of 1,132 respondents said they had at least one reception pupil who needed help going to the toilet
  • 33% have at least five children needing help, while 8% had at least 10
  • 92% reported a decrease in speech and language abilities among reception starters over the past two years.

A Department for Education spokesperson said that the government was working to ensure that a record share of children are “school-ready” at the age of five, “turning the tide on inherited challenges of lack of access to high-quality early education, and helping teachers focus on teaching so every child in the class can achieve and thrive”.

The spokesperson added that the government had already increased access to early years care for hundreds of thousands of families and was investing £1.5bn to “rebuild early years services”.

BBC/Kate McGough Two little girls, one asian with dark hair, one white with blonde hair sit at a table in reception class. The table is covered with a sheet and they are painting with brushes on a piece of paper. BBC/Kate McGough

Pupils paint in their first week in reception class

Catherine Miah, deputy head at St Mary’s Church of England Primary School in Stoke, encouraged schools to budget for a speech and language therapist, who could have an “incredible” impact on children.

“We’ve had to make sacrifices elsewhere, but if children aren’t ready to learn you could sit them in front of the best phonics lessons in the world, they’re not going to take it onboard if they’ve not got those learning behaviours.”

The school says a third of its pupils need help with toilet training when they join nursery, but the school works with parents to ensure they are toilet-trained by the time they reach reception.

“We’re a team. It’s not a case of saying to parents ‘This is your job. Why haven’t you done it?’ We need to work together.”

The government has set a target that 75% of children leaving reception at five years old will have a “good level of development” by 2028. Last year 68% of children were at that level, so an extra 45,000 children a year are needed to reach that goal.

To achieve a “good” level of development, a child is assessed by teachers at the end of their reception year on tasks including dressing, going to the toilet, and paying attention in class.

Pepe Di’Iasio, of the Association of School and College Leaders, said reception teachers were “brilliant” at supporting young children but local services have been badly eroded over the past decade.

“It has left schools picking up the pieces,” he said. “Many children are starting school already several months behind their peers.”

Parenting charity Kindred Squared found that teachers are spending 2.5 hours a day helping children who haven’t hit developmental milestones instead of teaching.

They have written a set of guidelines for parents to check whether their child has the skills they need to begin school.

The Department for Education was approached for comment.

BBC/Kate McGough A woman in a grey top with long dark hair and glasses sits with her five year old son on her knee. They are both smiling.  BBC/Kate McGough

Diane’s son had support with his speech and language during reception

Diane’s son has just started Year 1 at St Mary’s in Stoke this year. She says without the school’s support he would have been much further behind in his development.

“Within two weeks he was out of nappies,” said Diane. “They would help him on the toilet here and I’d do it at home, we’d work together.”

Teachers say her boy is thriving, but Diane says the school has been instrumental in supporting his special educational needs and improving his speech and language.

“He does a lot for himself, whereas before he was always dependent on me. School have helped me to help him become more independent and more confident,” she said.

Additional reporting by Emily Doughty

Omar criticizes GOP attacks on left after Kirk's shooting: 'full of s—'

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Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) on Thursday criticized Republican attacks on the left after the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, saying they were “full of s—.”

“You have people like Nancy Mace, who constantly harass, you know, people that she finds inferior and wants them not to exist in this country or ever,” Omar told left-wing pundit Mehdi Hasan in an interview on his Zeteo platform Thursday.

“And, you know, you have people like Trump, who has incited violence against people like me. And so, you know, these people are full of s—, and it’s important for us to call them out while we feel anger and sadness,” she added. 

Omar also said that the video and news of Kirk’s assassination were “really mortifying.”

“It was really mortifying to hear the news, to see the video. You know, all I could think about was his wife, his children, that image is going to live forever,” she told Hasan.

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) decried Kirk’s death via a series of social media posts on Wednesday, placing blame on the left for a rise in political violence, despite statements from Democrats condemning the fatal shooting.

“If you have a different opinion from the left, they want to kill you. That is a fact, and that’s the way you all should report it,” Mace said previously. 

On Wednesday night, President Trump said that he was “filled with grief and anger” at the fatal shooting of Kirk, and referred to Kirk as a “martyr for truth and freedom.”

The president, via a Wednesday night video posted online, also pledged to ““find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity and to other political violence.” He also blamed the “radical left” for the “rhetoric that is directly responsible for the terrorism that we’re seeing in our country today.”

The Hill has reached out to the White House and Mace’s office for comment.

US wholesale inventories revised lower in July

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. wholesale inventories increased a bit less than initially thought in July, suggesting businesses were not rushing to rebuild inventory after stocks were depleted in the second quarter.

Stocks at wholesalers edged up 0.1%, instead of rising 0.2% as estimated last month, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had expected last month’s estimate would be unrevised.

Inventories, a key part of gross domestic product, gained 0.2% in June. They advanced 1.3% on a year-over-year basis in July. Wholesale stocks of motor vehicles dropped 1.6%. But stocks of apparel surged 1.9%, while those of prescription medication increased 1.8%. Grocery inventories increased 2.0%.

Inventories decreased at a $32.9 billion annualized rate in the second quarter, subtracting 3.29 percentage points from GDP. That was, however, more than offset by a record 4.95 percentage point contribution from a smaller trade deficit.

The economy grew at a 3.3% annualized rate last quarter after contracting at a 0.5% pace in the first quarter.

Sales at wholesalers jumped 1.4% in July after rising 0.7% in June. At July’s sales pace it would take wholesalers 1.28 months to clear shelves, down from 1.29 months in June.

(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

Jair Bolsonaro sentenced to 27 years in prison for plotting Brazil coup

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Ione WellsSouth America correspondent in Brasília and

Vanessa BuschschlüterBBC News

EVARISTO SA/AFP via Getty Images Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro gestures after taking medical tests at DF Star hospital in Brasilia on August 16, 2025. He is wearing a pale yellow polo shirt and touches his forehead with his hand. EVARISTO SA/AFP via Getty Images

Jair Bolsonaro was found guilty of five charges

The former president of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, has been sentenced to 27 years and three months in prison after being found guilty of plotting a military coup.

A panel of five Supreme Court justices handed down the sentence just hours after they had convicted the former leader.

They ruled he was guilty of leading a conspiracy aimed at keeping him in power after he lost the 2022 election to his left-wing rival, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Four of the justices found him guilty while one voted to acquit him.

The Supreme Court panel also barred him from running for public office until 2033.

Bolsonaro, who was put under house arrest after being deemed a flight risk, did not attend this final phase of the trial in person.

But he has in the past said it was designed to prevent him from running in the 2026 presidential election – even though he had already been barred from public office on separate charges. He has also called it a “witch hunt”.

His words have previously been echoed by US President, Donald Trump, who imposed 50% tariffs on Brazilian goods, framing them as retaliation for Bolsonaro’s prosecution.

Reacting to the guilty verdict, Trump said he found it “very surprising” and compared it to his own experience: “That’s very much like they tried to do with me. But they didn’t get away with it at all.”

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that Brazil’s Supreme Court had “unjustly ruled to imprison former President Jair Bolsonaro” and threatened to “respond accordingly to this witch hunt”.

Brazil’s foreign ministry reacted swiftly, posting on X that “threats like the one made today by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in a statement that attacks a Brazilian authority and ignores the facts and the compelling evidence on record, will not intimidate our democracy”.

Bolsonaro, who is 70, now faces the prospect of spending the rest of his life in prison.

His lawyers are expected to argue that he should be kept under house arrest instead of being sent to jail.

They will also plead for a lower sentence.

However, they will not be able to appeal against the verdict itself, as that would only have been possible if two out of the five justices had voted to acquit.

Bolsonaro was found guilty of five charges, all relating to his attempt to cling to power after he was beaten in the 2022 election.

But prosecutors said he had started to plot to stay in power long before, proposing a coup to military commanders and sowing unfounded doubts about the electoral system.

They also said that Bolsonaro knew of a plan to assassinate Lula and his vice-presidential running mate, as well as a Supreme Court Justice.

The justices found he had led a conspiracy and also convicted seven of his co-conspirators, including senior military officers. Among them are two former defence ministers, a former spy chief and former security minster.

While the plot failed to enlist enough support from the military to go ahead, it did culminate in the storming of government buildings by Bolsonaro’s supporters on 8 January 2023, the justices found.

Order was quickly restored and more than 1,500 people were arrested.

But, according to Alexandre de Moraes – the justice who oversaw the trial – Brazil had come close to descending into authoritarianism.

“We are slowly forgetting that Brazil almost returned to its 20-year dictatorship because a criminal organisation, comprised of a political group, doesn’t know how to lose elections,” he said before casting his guilty vote.

Brazil’s recent history and the decades it spent under military rule were also invoked by Justice Cármen Lúcia, who cast the decisive third “guilty” vote on Thursday.

She compared the attempted coup to a “virus”, which, if left to fester, can kill the society in which it has taken hold in.

The sole dissenting voice on the five-member panel was Luiz Fux, who argued in an 11-hour speech on Wednesday that the accusations against Jair Bolsonaro were unfounded and voted for him to be acquitted.

But on Thursday, Cármen Lúcia, the only woman on the panel, insisted that Brazil’s democratic order had been at risk and warned that “there was no immunity to authoritarianism”.

Trump meets with Yankees, attends game on 9/11 anniversary

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President Trump on Thursday attended a New York Yankees game in the Bronx on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, drawing a mix of cheers and jeers from the crowd.

The president sat in a private box for the game, where he was joined by Yankees team President Randy Levine. The crowd offered loud cheers as well as some boos when Trump’s face was shown on screens at the stadium during the national anthem.

Prior to the game, Trump visited with members of the team in the Yankees’ clubhouse. He shook hands with star outfielder Aaron Judge, manager Aaron Boone and others. Players wore hats with “FDNY” and “NYPD” emblazoned on them to honor first responders on 9/11.

Trump told the team he was friends with the late George Steinbrenner, who owned the team for nearly 40 years.

“You’re going to win. You’re going to go all the way,” Trump told the players and coaches.

The president quipped about hosting the Yankees’ arch-rival Boston Red Sox in the Oval Office earlier this year, after which the Red Sox went on a lengthy winning streak.

Earlier in the day, Trump attended a remembrance ceremony at the Pentagon to honor those killed in the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

Newmont Stock Is Rising. Why This Analyst Says the Gold Miner Is a Buy.

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Newmont Stock Is Rising. Why This Analyst Says the Gold Miner Is a Buy.

Southern Water bans tankers doing runs to US billionaire’s lake

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Jonah FisherEnvironment correspondent, Hampshire and

Tom InghamClimate and Science Producer

Gwyndaf Hughes/BBC The lake at Conholt Park surrounded by trees. Gwyndaf Hughes/BBC

Water from drought-hit Hampshire has been used to help fill this lake in Wiltshire

Southern Water has warned tanker companies to stop delivering its water to the Wiltshire estate of an American billionaire.

Some of it was recently used, entirely legally, to help fill a lake, despite a hosepipe ban being in place locally for domestic users.

Multiple water tankers have been filmed both day and night by local residents filling up from standpipes in part of neighbouring Hampshire where a drought order is in place.

The BBC has been told that those tankers went to Conholt Park, a 2,500 acre estate owned by Stephen Schwarzman – who is one of the world’s richest men and a financial backer of US President Donald Trump.

A spokesperson for Mr Schwarzman confirmed that a small proportion of the water transported had very recently been used to help fill a new lake but said the water has been “sourced through licenced providers responsible for the lawful and proper extraction and delivery”. They said an advanced irrigation system was how the lake would mainly be filled.

Despite the ongoing drought, the tankers are legally allowed to take the water in Hampshire under licence because construction work is not domestic and therefore not covered by current drought restrictions.

However, Tim McMahon, Southern Water’s managing director, said he was “appalled by this use of water” and that the company had imposed on immediate ban on tankers extracting from the standpipes.

Southern Water said it did not know exactly how much water had been taken but that there had been a spike in the last week with “significant” amounts taken but with other users also making use of the standpipes it was impossible to say who had taken more.

Jonah Fisher/BBC A water tanker drives past two men who watch by the side of the road. Jonah Fisher/BBC

Locals have been documenting the movement of tankers to the Conholt Park estate.

The water firm, which serves more then two million customers, said it was first alerted by residents in Andover who had spotted the tankers coming and going from the standpipes.

Among them was Laurence Leask, an air conditioning inspector who told the BBC that he has been waking up at 03:00 BST to follow the tankers from the standpipes in Andover to the estate eight miles away, just over the border in Wiltshire, which is not subject to a drought order at present.

“We think there have been over 30 tankers a day, seven days a week,” he said.

“That’s a lot of water. I worked out that 30 tankers means a million litres a day, something like that.”

He said it had been going on for the past few months, prompting him to co-ordinate a network of neighbours who took it in turns to film and follow the tankers.

One of those, Trevor Marshall, said: “We think they might be using the water to fill the lake. He makes notes of the tankers passing his kitchen window and sends them to Laurence.

“At the same time we’re on a hosepipe ban – it’s incredibly outrageous.”

Reuters/Kevin Lamarque Stephen Schwarzman gestures with his hands as he speaks to US president Donald Trump who is sat beside him to his left at a meeting at the White House in 2017. Both men are wearing dark suits with light shirts and vibrant red ties. Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

Stephen Schwarzman is an ally of US president Trump

Mr Schwarzman is one of the world’s richest men, with an estimated worth of more than £30bn, having founded Blackstone, one of the biggest investment funds in the world.

He has been renovating the 2,500 acre, 17th century shooting estate since he bought it in 2022 for an estimated £80m.

That involves an extensive redevelopment and constructing a new lake.

A statement from Blackstone said: “The suggestion that the new owners of Conholt Park violated water regulations is false and misleading.

“They have taken extraordinary care to ensure the restoration of the property complies with all local laws and regulations. Most recently, as construction winds down (expected to be completed very soon) a proportion of transported water has been used in connection with irrigation and the lake.

“The water has been sourced through licenced providers responsible for the lawful and proper extraction and delivery. Water has been sourced from multiple locations, largely outside the region. Any suggestion that the owners violated local water regulations would be false and misleading.”

Southern Water said it would be “having robust conversations with those using this water and the companies working on their behalf”.

Managing director Tim McMahon said: “While this disappointing occurrence is highly unusual and rare, I would like to reassure customers that I am leading a thorough review into how this happened, and how we can tighten up both our internal monitoring processes and any legal loopholes so that this cannot happen again.”