The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Mobility scooter OAP’s knife attack

- CRAIG SMITH

Apensioner got off his mobility scooter in the middle of a Fife street and stabbed his brother-in-law as part of a long-running family feud.

Robert Pe n m a n , 66, attacked John Cunningham with a knife in the incident in Kirkcaldy, leaving him scarred for life.

He admitted the offence, which happened on Links Street on November 16 last year, when he appeared at the town’s sheriff court yesterday.

The court heard the pair clashed in broad daylight on a Saturday morning following an alleged incident i nv o l v i n g Mr Cunningham’s son the previous evening.

Fiscal Ronnie Hay said witnesses saw Mr Cunningham stop his van suddenly on Links Street not long after 10.30am, effectivel­y blocking the road. Penman approached the vehicle and Mr Cunningham got out and was seen to throw the first punch.

The pair then exchanged blows before Penman fell to his knees.

Mr Cunningham got back in his vehicle and drove home while witnesses went to the aid of Penman who was lying in the middle of the road.

However, it later emerged that Penman had managed to stab Mr Cunningham three times with a Stanley knife.

Mr

Hay said

Mr

Cunningham’s wife heard him pull his vehicle into the drive at their home and became worried when he did not immediatel­y enter the house.

She went out to see what was keeping him and found him sitting in the driving seat bleeding from his lefthand side.

Mr Cunningham was taken to Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy where he needed internal and external stitches to his wounds.

He told officers he had “felt something cold” in his side before leaving Penman “in bits” following the fight.

Penman, whose address was given as Dur ward Street, Leven, was also taken to hospital for treatment to head injuries, but was later released.

Defence solicitor David Mc L a u g h l i n said the Crown had accepted his client had acted under provocatio­n.

Ho w e v e r, that was questioned by Sheriff Jamie Gilchrist QC who asked why Penman had approached Mr Cunningham with a knife in the first place.

“The extent of the provocatio­n appears to have been a punch or two, that’s all?” the sheriff asked.

“You are not offering an explanatio­n for that?”

Mr McLaughlin replied: “I can’t because Mr Penman hasn’t given me one.”

He said his client suffered from a number of health problems, including social phobia, panic attacks and anxiety and depression.

“It’s a matter which he is well aware could result in a custodial sentence,” Mr McLaughlin said.

Sheriff Gilchrist agreed to Mr McLaughlin’s request for bail to be continued and deferred sentence for the preparatio­n of background reports.

You are not offering an explanatio­n for that?

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