A GIRL who saw Henry Webster attacked has named the man she thinks wielded the hammer.

Giving evidence on day 11 of the trial at Bristol Crown Court, the schoolgirl, who cannot be named for legal reasons said: "The one with the D&G hoodie, he definitely had the hammer.

"I had seen him before and heard of him. I thought he was called Wasif.

"He's someone I know of, but I don't know him.

"He used to go to my school. He was in my sister's year and I had seen him outside school.

"I couldn't describe him to someone else, but if I saw him I'd know that was Wasif.

"I knew who he was because when I was walking with other people they would say that's Wasif."

Wasif Khan, 18, of Caversham Close, Amjad Qazi, 19, of Broad Street, and two boys who cannot be named, aged 15 and 16, deny causing grievous bodily harm with intent to Henry Webster on January 11, last year.

The teenage girl told the jury she saw Henry beaten by two adult Asian men on the tennis courts at Ridgeway school.

She described the man with the hammer as wearing a distinctive designer top.

"I'm quite positive it was the person wearing the D&G jacket who had the hammer," she said.

"It is Dolce and Gabbana and has a distinctive and' on the back.

"And the man wearing the D&G started hammering Henry.

"It was the man wearing the D&G that was definitely hammering.

"I can't remember what colour the jacket was, I think it was grey.

"I was shocked about what happened."

Cross-examining the witness, Peter Henry, defending Khan, asked: "You don't remember a man in a white or cream hoodie attacking Henry?"

She replied: "No,"

"Thinking about it now, can you remember what colour grey the jacket was?" Mr Henry continued.

"I can't really remember. I think it might have been light grey," said the witness.

"I'm not disputing you saw a D&G jacket, but whether the person wearing it had the hammer" said Mr Henry.

"I'm positive," she replied.

The trial has previously heard that when Khan was arrested, within half an hour of the attack on Henry, he was carrying a plastic bag containing a black D&G jacket.

The jacket had a large ampersand logo across the back.

The trial continues.