The jury in the inquests into the deaths of 96 Liverpool fans at the 1989 Hillsborough disaster has retired to consider its verdict.
The jury of seven women and three men, who have been hearing evidence for over two years, retired this afternoon to consider 14 key questions set out by the coroner in a 33-page questionnaire.
Those include determining if match commander David Duckenfield (pictured below) is responsible for the unlawful killing of the fans by gross negligence manslaughter.
The hearings into Britain's worst sporting disaster began on 31 March 2014, at a specially built courtroom in Warrington, Cheshire.
Dozens of relatives of the 96 victims attended each of the more than 300 days the court has sat.
In April 1989 thousands of Liverpool FC fans were crushed during the club's FA Cup tie against Nottingham Forest on Sheffield Wednesday's Leppings Lane terrace.
At the start of the inquests, the coroner said none of the victims should be blamed for their deaths.
Jurors have heard months of evidence from more than 800 witnesses on topics including stadium safety, match planning, the events of the day, the emergency response and evidence gathering by police after the disaster.