Police and forensic teams are searching a property in Stanwell in Surrey following the arrest of a second man by officers investigating the Parsons Green terror attack.

A number of police vehicles were parked outside the address and forensic investigators were seen checking bins outside.

Property raided after terror attack

Sky News has discovered that the person who is registered to the address has links to Ron and Penny Jones, whose house in Sunbury was raided on Saturday.

The 21-year-old was detained in Hounslow, west London at around 11.50pm on the same day.

Image: Police tape was seen outside the property

He is being held at a police station in south London under the Terrorism Act.


Police are also searching an address in Hounslow.

Thirty people were injured during London's Friday morning rush hour when an improvised explosive device detonated on a Tube train.

Footage has emerged of a man in Sunbury carrying a Lidl bag, similar to the one the suspected device was hidden in, around an hour and a half before the attack.

The man was seen on camera at 6.50am reportedly leaving a house which police would later search.

Image: The man, captured on CCTV footage, with a Lidl bag. Pic: ITV News

Home Secretary Amber Rudd said police were "working hard" to track down those responsible for the blast.

She added there was "no evidence" to back up Islamic State's claim there were more "live" explosive devices.

But she described 2017, which has seen a string of terror attacks in the UK, as "a year like no other".

:: Timeline - Britain's year of terror

Ms Rudd also directly criticised Donald Trump over his claim the bombers were known to Scotland Yard.

Dismissing it as "speculation - not a leak", she told the BBC's The Andrew Marr Show: "It is never helpful to have speculation about an ongoing operation and I would include the President of the United States in that."

Image: The Tube bombing at Parson Green left 30 people injured

Her comments come after an 18-year-old man was arrested on Saturday in the departure lounge of Dover port in connection with the blast.

A local councillor has said the teenager is understood to be an Iraqi orphan who had moved to Britain when he was 15 after his parents died.

Ian Harvey, leader of Spelthorne Borough Council whose ward is Sunbury East, said he had discovered the boy's background from neighbours of the Joneses and publicly available information.

He said: "One thing I understand is that he was an Iraqi refugee who came here aged 15 - his parents died in Iraq."

Image: Amber Rudd criticised Donald Trump for his 'unhelpful' speculation

:: Scale of anti-terror probes 'unprecedented'

On Saturday officers searched a house in Surrey they said was directly linked to the first arrest.

The property is registered to an elderly foster couple who had been honoured for their work with child refugees.

Following the search, police set up cordons on nearby roads, which have since been reopened.

In the wake of the bombing, police hinted they were searching for more than one suspect, and said they were keeping an "open mind" as to whether multiple people were involved.