The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Appeal: Soldier loses appeal over threats in Fife takeaway.

Man had drunk bottle of vodka before making threats

- Craig sMiTh csmith@thecourier.co.uk

A Fife soldier who threatened to behead Muslims with a machete at his local Indian takeaway has failed in a bid to have his sentence overturned.

Scott Mackay, 33, from Rosyth, had consumed a bottle of vodka before he called 999 in September 2015 claiming he planned to kill workers at Sizzlers Tandoori on Queensferr­y Road because he believed they were part of a Taliban cell.

Mackay, who has undertaken tours of duty in Afghanista­n, told the call handler what he was about to do was a “murderous crime” and “mass murder”.

However, the call was cut short when a police car drew up alongside him and he was detained. He had disposed of the machete but it was recovered nearby.

Despite lodging a special defence of insanity, Mackay was subsequent­ly convicted of acting in a racially aggravated manner after a trial at Dunfermlin­e Sheriff Court in April 2016, and was sentenced to a community payback order involving three years’ supervisio­n, along with conditions Mackay obtain mental health treatment and abstain from alcohol, and a 12-month restrictio­n of liberty order.

The verdict then prompted an appeal on the grounds that the sheriff had failed to properly explain to jurors what was required to prove the insanity defence, but appeal court judges threw that out.

Mackay was found guilty of behaving in a threatenin­g or abusive manner which was likely to cause a reasonable person to suffer fear or alarm in that he did, during the course of a telephone call to a call handler employed by the police, repeatedly swear, state that he was armed with a machete and utter threats of violence and death towards Muslims in Queensferr­y Road on September 20 2015.

He was also found guilty of having a machete with him in circumstan­ces “aggravated by religious prejudice” on the same date, while he had also pleaded guilty to possessing flares and pyrotechni­cs at his home in Hudson Street on September 21 2015.

The court previously heard that Mackay had claimed he had made the call to police in the hope that officers might intervene and stop him, although he said he did intend to behead the shop workers, whom he perceived to be Muslim.

During the trial, defence solicitor Brian Black said his client had “negative attitudes toward Muslims” which had arisen as a result of experience­s and operations in Afghanista­n.

Lawyers had claimed Mackay had been “unable by reason of mental disorder to appreciate the nature or wrongfulne­ss” of his conduct, and argued in his appeal that Sheriff Charles MacNair misdirecte­d the jury by using the words “to any extent” in relation to the nature or wrongfulne­ss of the conduct.

They said this defined the special defence of insanity “too narrowly”.

However, Lord Justice General Lord Carloway, sitting with Lord Malcolm and Lord Woolman, refused the appeal and stressed that it was “important to look at the sheriff’s charge as a whole and not to scrutinise words in isolation”.

“The jury would have been clear that they had to decide whether the appellant’s mental disorder resulted in him being unable to appreciate the wrongfulne­ss of his conduct,” the lord justice general concluded.

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 ??  ?? Scott Mackay threatened to kill workers at Sizzlers Tandoori.
Scott Mackay threatened to kill workers at Sizzlers Tandoori.

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