Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

MSP quick to shoot down bounty hunter’s claims

-

BRINGING fugitives to justice in his adopted homeland, gun-toting US bounty hunter Christian Matlock is used to being unpopular.

But his views on his home town of Brechin have been similarly unwelcome among its residents, who have jumped to the town’s defence following a BBC documentar­y that was accused of showing the town in a bad light.

Mr Matlock said the town “doesn’t have anything going for it” and “there’s no potential here for young people” during The Scottish Bounty Hunter, which could return for a full series.

Mairi Evans, MSP for Angus North and Mearns, who is also a councillor for Brechin, said: “Everyone is entitled to their opinion but there are a lot of people in Brechin working really hard to make it a better place to live.

“I hear some saying there is nothing in Brechin but it is simply not true. There has been a significan­t level of investment in the past few years with the new community campus and the flood prevention scheme.

“The new flood defences have brightened up the entrance to the city along River Street and the new sports facilities at the community campus are a real bonus.”

Mr Matlock was brought up as Christian Allday by his mother Lesley before moving to America to find his former Edzell-based US Marine father Ricky Matlock when he was 21.

After leaving Scotland, he worked as a bouncer in Washington DC, saving up money to put himself through bail enforcemen­t school. He has been living in Virginia Beach, Virginia, since 2013, tracking down fugitives and bringing them to justice as a bail bondsman.

Ms Evans said Brechin is a “beautiful place to visit or live in and there are a lot of people in the community playing their part to make it even better”.

 ??  ?? Christian Matlock
Christian Matlock

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom