The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Teenage thugs blind woman in laser pen attack

- By Gordon Blackstock gblackstoc­k@sundaypost.com

A WOMAN has been left blind in one eye after a laser pen was shone into her face.

Police have launched an investigat­ion to find two teenage boys they think were responsibl­e for the incident in Clydebank.

It happened as the 33-year-old woman walked under a railway bridge on Dumbarton Road, near the junction with Cable Depot Road, at about 10pm on Saturday, September 10.

Both boys are described as being white, aged about 14 or 15 and wearing dark- coloured sportswear. One had brown hair in a quiff. The woman was taken to the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital for treatment and later reported the incident to police.

Det Sgt Kevin Mulvenna, of Police Scotland, said: “This was a completely unprovoked and senseless attack on this woman, which has left her blind in one eye.

“The youths responsibl­e must be caught as soon as possible.

“To point a laser pen at someone is highly irresponsi­ble.

“Extensive inquiries are ongoing to trace the two boys, with officers carrying out inquiries in the local area and studying CCT V footage to identify them.”

Anyone with any informatio­n is urged to contact police.

Laser pens and pointers are increasing­ly being viewed as a danger to the public.

And authoritie­s have been criticised for failing to tackle the menace.

In February, the British Airline Pilots Associatio­n said they should be classified as an “offensive weapon”.

The call came after a New York- bound plane was forced to turn back to London Heathrow Airport when a laser beam hit the cockpit after take off, causing a “medical issue” for a pilot.

It is illegal to shine a light at a plane “so as to dazzle the pilot”, but not an offence to own or carry a laser.

The organisati­on want sales of all but the lowest-power devices to be regulated to cut down in the number of incidents.

In 2015, a man who targeted a Police Scotland helicopter with a laser pen was jailed for 12 months after detectives used thermal imaging equipment to locate him.

Craig Ryan, 23, shone the beam at the aircraft from his garden in Stevenston, Ayrshire, forcing the pilot to take evasive action.

In 2014 three men from Leicesters­hire were jailed for using laser pens to dazzle pilots coming in to l and at East Midlands Airport.

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Laser pens are increasing­ly viewed as a danger to the public.
■ Laser pens are increasing­ly viewed as a danger to the public.

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