The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Man jailed after Perthshire arms haul uncovered

Cartridges banned under internatio­nal treaty

- JAMIE BUCHAN

A man has been jailed after police uncovered banned tear gas cartridges at his home in rural Perthshire. Stuart McCullie, 41, bought the live rounds from a shop in Germany when he was 16. The cartridges, which are prohibited in internatio­nal warfare, were found with a starter pistol which was capable of dischargin­g noxious liquid or gas. McCullie told police he had meant to hand in the firearm “after Dunblane” but was worried about taking them out of the house. His father, 66-year-old James McCullie, was also caught with prohibited ammunition – five long rifle cartridges – which he had planned to put on display, alongside his war medals. McCullie Jr was jailed for two years.

A factory worker has been jailed after police uncovered a stash of firearms, including chemical weapons banned for use in internatio­nal warfare, at his home in Perthshire. Officers raided the Auchterard­er property where father and son James and Stuart McCullie live as part of a probe into extreme bestiality pornograph­y. McCullie Sr, 61, originally faced allegation­s connected with obscene images, but the charge was later dropped by prosecutor­s. However, police uncovered a cache of weapons including live CN gas cartridges – tear gas – that son Stuart had bought over the counter in Germany when he was 16. Now 41, McCullie Jr told police he had meant to hand in the cartridges to police “after Dunblane” but never got round to it. At Perth Sheriff Court, he admitted having seven prohibited Flobert gas irritant cartridges, as well as a starter pistol capable of dischargin­g noxious liquid or gas. McCullie Sr admitted having prohibited ammunition, namely five long rifle cartridges which are designed or adapted to expand on impact. The haul was found during the police raid at Hillhead Farm Steadings in September 2015. After a lengthy proof hearing yesterday afternoon, Sheriff Lindsay Foulis ruled there were “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces” that meant a mandatory five-year jail term for possession of the CN cartridges was “disproport­ionate”. McCullie Jr was jailed for two years, while his father was ordered to complete 300 hours of unpaid community work. Sheriff Foulis said he was satisfied that McCullie Jr knew that the cartridges were in a drawer at the family home. “There were other things in that drawer and it seems to me that this was a hiding place for things which he did not want others to know he had,” he said. The sheriff told McCullie Jr: “I am satisfied that you knew you should have handed in the item when the amnesty was in place and it was a deliberate decision on your part not to do that. “And there was always the possibilit­y – no matter how small – of these items falling into the hands of someone with nefarious intentions.” Solicitor David Holmes said McCullie Sr, a former soldier, had planned to present his cartridges in a display case alongside his medals. Mr Holmes said that McCullie Jr had been naive about the firearm and cartridges, but stressed they were not lethal. The so-called “dumdum bullets” are designed to spread when they hit their target, increasing the diameter to produce a larger wound. They are often used for hunting, but are generally prohibited for use in war by internatio­nal convention. The court was previously told the CN cartridges were tear gas used for riot control by some police forces, but they are also banned in warfare.

There was always the possibilit­y... of these items falling into the hands of someone with nefarious intentions

 ??  ?? Police raided the home of James and Stuart McCullie as part of a probe into allegation­s of obscene images, but found weapons instead.
Police raided the home of James and Stuart McCullie as part of a probe into allegation­s of obscene images, but found weapons instead.

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