South Wales Echo

Curry house chef not guilty of chilli powder attack on angry customer

- JOHANNA CARR echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A CURRY house chef has praised the British justice system after being cleared of assaulting a customer by throwing chilli powder in his face after he complained about his food.

Speaking outside court, former restaurant owner Kamrul Islam said he was relieved to have been found not guilty of assault occasionin­g actual bodily harm on David Evans at his restaurant, the Prince of Bengal in Tonypandy, on January 21 last year.

Yesterday at Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court, after a five-day trial, a jury took three hours and 45 minutes to clear the 47-year-old father.

Mr Islam, who said he was now working as a certified air-conditioni­ng engineer having closed the restaurant down, said: “I was very confident that the British system would find the right answer.”

Mr Islam said the people of the Rhondda had given him “so much” in the 20 years he ran restaurant­s in the area and the result meant his reputation was intact. He thanked friends and family who had supported him over the past 13 months.

The trial heard Mr Evans went to dine in the restaurant with his wife Michelle, arriving at around 6pm and ordering food and drinks. The couple said their starters were not right but they did not complain. However, they claimed the chicken in their main meals tasted of paraffin and was shiny, rubbery and tough.

The Evanses told jurors that Mr Islam asked what the problem was in an aggressive way and then started swearing at them.

Mr Evans claimed Mr Islam stood at the kitchen doorway, pointing and shouting, before the hot spice was thrown at him.

In her closing speech to the jury, Ruth Smith, for Mr Islam, said the couple were were “clearly unreliable witnesses” who had “tailored their account”, which was “riddled with inconsiste­ncies” to give a false impression of their behaviour. She said there were “vast chunks of the evening that they have no recollecti­on of” including the number of times various staff members went to their table, which was shown on CCTV.

She asked the jury to consider “whether Mr and Mrs Evans were drunk in the restaurant and as a result of drink became abusive, on occasions using swear words and, in the case of Mr Evans, aggressive and threatenin­g violence to Mr Islam”.

The trial heard the couple ordered two bottles of wine and two Cobra beers, but Mrs Evans told the jury they had not started the second bottle of wine by the time of the incident.

Ms Smith said Mrs Evans had “exaggerate­d” the effects of the chilli powder on her husband’s eyes, claiming his vision was still not good, despite Mr Evans being discharged from hospital within a few days with “good vision” recorded.

She added: “It is clear that the consequenc­es of the chilli going into Mr Evans’ eyes were unpleasant, but just because one person ends up with an injury does not mean they are a victim.

“Mr Islam told you that through his years of experience he was alert to the sense of aggression and once the backing away and giving of space to Mr Evans had not worked, that he had continued to act aggressive­ly, he felt under threat.”

Ms Smith added that Mr Islam did not pick up a knife or something similar when he went back to the kitchen because “his intention wasn’t to hurt Mr Evans but to prevent violence being used against him”.

 ?? WALES NEWS SERVICE ?? Kamrul Islam was cleared of assault occasionin­g actual bodily harm
WALES NEWS SERVICE Kamrul Islam was cleared of assault occasionin­g actual bodily harm
 ??  ?? David and Michelle Evans
David and Michelle Evans

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