THE murders carried out by former Huddersfield student Jermaine Lindsay will be the focus of attention next week.

Inquests at the Royal Courts of Justice in London into the 52 people killed in the July 7 bombings will look at Lindsay’s actions.

The hearings have been adjourned until Monday when they will begin hearing evidence about the bombing between King’s Cross and Russell Square on the Piccadilly line in which 26 people died.

The co-ordinated attacks on three tube trains and a bus on July 7, 2005 by suicide bombers Lindsay, 19, former Dewsbury man Mohammad Siddique Khan, 30, Shehzad Tanweer, 22, and Hasib Hussain, 18, were the worst single terrorist atrocity on British soil.

Lindsay grew up in Bradley and Dalton and went to school in Rawthorpe.

He was remembered as a bright, athletic student at the former Rawthorpe High School until he converted to Islam.

On leaving school, he moved to Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire with his pregnant wife.

Before the adjournment, the inquest heard about the results of the suicide bomb detonated by Mohammad Siddique Khan at Edgware Road.

The coroner was told medics treating wounded 7/7 survivors ran out of supplies and had to use first aid kits from a Marks & Spencer store and a hotel.

Paul Dadge, the former firefighter famously photographed hugging victim Davinia Turrell as she clutched a white burns mask to her face, said there was little doctors and nurses could do without the right equipment.

Mr Dadge was a passenger on the train behind the one blown up by suicide bomber Khan at Edgware Road tube station, killing six people.

He described coming across the shocked and injured survivors of the attack and setting up a casualty station in the Marks & Spencer near the station.

Mr Dadge was pictured helping Ms Turrell across the road to the Hilton Metropole Hotel after the store was evacuated, because of a bomb scare sparked by an abandoned laptop bag.