The three men facing jail for the attack on Kingston Mosque were found guilty after a tense four-week trial.
David Morris, 21, of Epsom, Alfie Wallace, 19, of Shepperton and Martin Pottle, 23, of Hanworth, were all convicted on March 30.
Racist Alfie Wallace was caught grinning in a picture found on co-defendant David Morris’s phone. He was found guilty of violent disorder and racially aggravated criminal damage.
In a closed session during the trial, the court heard he had displayed a black eye to a police officer at a separate hearing last year and claimed “a Paki” had hit him.
Morris, captured on CCTV in Tesco buying bacon, later found strewn over the mosque, was cleared of violent disorder, but found guilty of racially aggravated criminal damage.
Martin Pottle, who lied to police about being with the gang that attacked the mosque, was found guilty of violent disorder and racially aggravated criminal damage.
At their conviction at Kingston Crown Court on March 30, Judge Georgina Kent told them they could face custody, but released them on bail to be sentenced on April 27 at Kingston Crown Court.
The six men found not guilty were Terry Earl, 32, of Northolt, Adam Khalfan, 19, of Ashford, Paul Abley, 24, of Feltham, Karl Matthews, 21, of Brentford, Jordan Ellingham, 21, of Feltham, and James Stacey, 19, of Shepperton.
Morris, Wallace and Pottle were all convicted on Friday, March 30.
One of the men cleared of the attack said the case against him was “sensationalised nonsense”.
Jordan Ellingham used social network Twitter to say: “Bittersweet victory. Finally justice has prevailed. Kingston Mosque: sensationalised nonsense. Should never have gone to court.”
During the trial, all nine men heard police intelligence that they may now be targets for extremist Muslims, although in the year and a half since they were first arrested, none have faced any attack.
After the verdicts, Terry Earl, who kept away from the other co-defendants for much of the trial before he was acquitted, said: “Take my name off the terrorist hit list.”
Another man found not guilty, Karl Matthews, had tears in his eyes as he discovered he had been cleared by the jury.
Others reached over to calm Alfie Wallace down as he was found guilty.
One said outside court “Alfie is innocent” while Wallace’s father also became emotional at the guilty verdict.
Click here for full coverage of the attack, trial and the aftermath
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