East Kilbride News

THUG WAS HOUSED NEXT TO VICTIM – TO ATTACK AGAIN

Ripped chunk from man’s nose and bit off part of his finger

- FRASER WILSON

This is the thug who bit a man’s nose off in the middle of our streets.

Craig Chalmers left his victim needing multiple and ongoing reconstruc­tive surgeries to his face.

A year later he was placed next to his terrified victim in the YPeople homeless unit in East Kilbride Village.

He should never have been allowed to be so close to the man he left tormented.

Days after he was placed there, he bit a chunk out of the man’s finger in a second sickening attack.

The 23-year-old gnasher was jailed for that – he was caged for a THIRD time after snapping at a cops’ arm in August this year.

We can’t show you Chalmers’ face because he is back behind bars waiting to appear in court on another matter.

What we can do is share the horror of his victim’s mother who has been left furious that he was allowed to attack her vulnerable son again – this time in a place he was supposed to be safe.

Inside she tells us of the horror of her son’s attack and how it led to a sharp decline in his mental health.

She also asks: “How was this allowed to happen?”

A mum whose son had his nose bitten off in a vicious attack has slammed the bosses of a homeless unit for letting his attacker stay in the facility while he was there – only for him to assault her son AGAIN.

The mum-of-three told us how she “collapsed” when she saw her eldest son laid up in hospital with a foot print on the side of his face and the ball of his nose ripped off.

Now the mother, who has asked for anonymity, has listed a host of failures at the specialist YPeople project in East Kilbride Village.

A registered senior care specialist who deals with homelessne­ss herself, our source believes the facility “is not fit for purpose”.

Second time around, thug Craig Chalmers bit a chunk out of her son’s finger, resulting in him having to be tested for HIV. That happened just three days after Chalmers was moved into the unit.

Speaking to the News, the mother said: “My son has been in and out of homeless units because of issues he has.

“About 18 months ago, the council decided it would be better for him to be in the YPeople project rather than Lindsay House, saying there was more support there for him.

“He called me one night and asked if he could come home, saying he couldn’t stay there. I asked why and he said it was because Chalmers was there.”

Chalmers was jailed in 2017 when he left his victim – who we have chosen not to name – needing multiple, and ongoing, reconstruc­tive surgeries to his nose.

That included a number of skin grafts and repeat plastic surgery operations.

“I couldn’t believe it,” the victim’s mother told the News. “I had sent over all the informatio­n about Chalmers and the previous attack, and had briefed staff there.

“He should not have been in the unit when my son was there. Three days later Chalmers attacked him again, hitting him on the head with a brick and biting off part of his finger.

“I asked the staff why he was allowed to be there and what had happened – one worker pipedup and said, ‘we can’t decide who comes in and who doesn’t – he has every right to use the service’.

“So what about their duty of care to my son?

“Then a senior case officer told me my son was ‘an attention seeker’ who didn’t didn’t like it if others got attention.

“It’s unbelievab­le.

“My son’s mental health has deteriorat­ed badly since this and I blame the YPeople project for that.”

Bosses from the YPeople charity previously told the News they “would never ban” an individual from the unit, no matter their actions.

Instead, they implement a “cooling-off period” and ban access to certain privileges.

But, as a homeless charity, they “would never turn their backs on anyone.”

Chalmers was jailed for 18-months for the attack.

In August, he was locked up for a third time for biting – this time he tried to sink his teeth into a copper.

The 23-year-old was jailed for nine months for that offence which he committed whilst on early release from prison – he was again given early release from jail in September, just WEEKS after being sentenced.

He has since been taken back into custody on another matter.

Our source blasted the quality of staffing at the YPeople project and the processes in place, but a Care Inspectora­te report from December 2018 rated this as ‘very good’.

Pauline Lunn from YPeople told us that staff are trained to the appropriat­e level, with continuous training and refresher courses.

The victim’s mother told us she thinks the facility should be moved out of the Village centre where there is “just too much temptation”.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Gnasher Chalmers was caged for three separate assaults involving biting
Gnasher Chalmers was caged for three separate assaults involving biting
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Problems Examples of anti-social behaviour and issues at Lindsay House just keep coming
Problems Examples of anti-social behaviour and issues at Lindsay House just keep coming
 ??  ?? Gnasher Chalmers has been caged for three separate assaults involving biting
Gnasher Chalmers has been caged for three separate assaults involving biting

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom