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This is the harrowing moment a terrified mother screamed in horror when a gang of burglars broke into her home to steal jewellery worth thousands of pounds.
The petrified mother had just put her two young children to bed when the men broke into her property in Ealing, west London.
Video footage from internal security cameras inside her home showed the group enter the property through a patio door and walk through the kitchen.
She came downstairs to see what was going and screamed when she was grabbed by one of the men.
She was later pinned down while the burglars stole tens of thousands of pounds worth of jewellery from the house.
The distressing footage was used to help catch the burglars, four of whom have been jailed for a combined total of 23 years.
They were found to be responsible for 16 break-ins across London and stole hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of cash, jewellery and electrical equipment.
Two of the men - Stephen Kelly, 22, and Danny Logan, 21 - were arrested in March 2016, after officers responded to an alarm activation at a different property in Primrose Hill.
The burglars had caused an estimated £15,000 worth of damage to the home after they broke in and stole a steel safe, which was found abandoned in the garden.
Kelly and Logan later were linked to a different burglary in Hampstead in February last year.
The pair were bailed and the police investigation was widened to include Daniel Hill, 22, and Beau Abououf, 27, after officers looked at their phones.
The men were linked to a further 14 burglaries at homes across London in Barnet, Brent, Camden, Ealing and Haringey between November 2015 and June 2016.
In many of the break-ins, the group stole expensive designer watches and clothes as well as jewellery.
Detailed analysis of mobile phone records revealed the communication between the group including images and videos featuring them flaunting the stolen goods.
Abououf, Kelly and Logan were also subsequently charged with a robbery that took place at a house in Ealing on March 8, 2016.
The horrific footage showed the men enter the woman's home and steal her jewellery. She bravely spoke about the incident afterwards.
Meanwhile, a different CCTV at a property in Camden showed the men steal designer clothing and electrical items worth £89,800.
Abououf was charged with conspiracy to burgle and one count of robbery and was convicted after a six-day trial at Harrow Crown Court in April.
Kelly and Logan were also charged with conspiracy to burgle and one count of robbery.
They both admitted conspiracy to burgle and denied robbery.
They were found guilty of the robbery charge after a five-day trial at Harrow Crown Court.
Hill admitted two burglary charges as well as the conspiracy to burgle.
Abououf, of Camden, was jailed for eight years. Kelly and Logan, both of Camden, were jailed to six years each.
Hill, of no fixed address, was sentenced to three years.
Detective Inspector James Hale, of the Met's Trident and Area Command, said: 'These men were all professional burglars who committed crime in a highly organised manner to support a lavish lifestyle.
'They have shown a complete disregard for the victims of their crimes, many of whom have suffered severe financial and psychological damage.
'In most of the burglaries, the men targeted properties where they believed the homeowner was away, but, in one terrifying robbery, Abououf, Kelly and Logan stole jewellery from a house in Ealing after pinning a mother to the bed in front of her young child, who is still suffering psychological trauma more than a year later.
'I would like to pay tribute to this woman for her bravery in giving evidence in court during the trial.
'Thankfully, robberies of this kind in London are rare and this conviction sends a message that the Met Police will do all it can to pursue, apprehend and bring to justice callous criminals of this nature.
'We believe there may still be other individuals linked to this group who may have been involved in the conspiracy.
'I would urge anyone with any information about these men to call police on 101 or Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555 111.'