Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Woman jailed for arson attack

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herself but changed her mind, leaving out the back. The fire was put out but it was estimated to cost between £12,000 to 15,000 to repair. When she was traced to a bar she blamed her ex-husband.

The court heard she was first bailed after an incident on August 9, 2015 when there was an altercatio­n at a Marsh play area which involved her arguing with other parents.

One of the women involved went and told her husband who went to remonstrat­e with McEwan in the car park. She ignored him and got into her car, drove past an exit taking a bend sharply and caught the man, knocking him over. Mr Ritchie said he was not injured but was shaken and tried to run after McEwan but she drove off.

Having spent some time in a psychiatri­c unit she moved into the house in Glenfield Avenue, but was told it was only temporary by the council.

On November 18 she appeared in court denying the dangerous driving charge. Later that day she took a taxi to Fartown but during the journey suddenly shouted to the driver to pull over in Blacker Road saying she had a knife.

She ordered him out and drove off in his car with around £35 cash and his phone. The vehicle was tracked to a gym in Waterloo where McEwan claimed she had found the keys and denied any robbery.

She had further psychiatri­c treatment before on April 30 she contacted a woman selling a car and asked to see it. She then asked to go for a test drive and having been given the keys drove off, stealing it before the woman could get in.

In June, following the death of her father and notice to quit her address, she threatened to attack and kill anyone who tried to get her out of the house two days before she started the fire.

Stephen Grattage, representi­ng McEwan, said the offences were serious but reflected her dysfunctio­nal thinking at the time when faced with various pressures in her life.

She had received effective treatment for her psychosis while in custody for the last year and was no longer considered the risk she had been. He urged she be dealt with in the community.

McEwan, 34, admitted dangerous driving, robbery, theft and arson reckless whether life was endangered and was jailed for a total of four and a half years.

Judge Sally Cahill QC said she accepted her mental health problems had contribute­d to her offending but there had also been calculatio­n in what she did.

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