Scottish Daily Mail

Disgraced MP Joyce spared jail over store assaults

- By Neil Lancefield

FORMER MP Eric Joyce has avoided jail – but been sent on a rehabilita­tion programme – after attacking two teenagers in an ‘entirely unacceptab­le’ assault in a shop.

The 54-year-old attacked the boys aged 14 and 15 at News and Food Express i n Chalk Farm, north London, on October 17.

District Judge John Zani, at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court, handed down a ten-week jail term suspended for two years and a £1,080 fine, and ordered that he must attend a rehabilita­tion programme which aims to reduce violent behaviour.

Joyce, the former MP for Falkirk, insisted at the trial earlier this month that he was performing a ‘ citizen’s arrest’ but the judge found him guilty of two counts of common assault.

Prosecutor Jonathan Swain told the court that it was an ‘unjustifie­d and unprovoked assault on both boys’.

Joyce grabbed the 14-year- old and knocked him to the floor and continued to hold on and wrestle the boy. The second boy tried to help his friend but was elbowed by Joyce and winded.

Joyce was convicted in 2012 of four common assaults in a House of Commons bar – which led to his resignatio­n from the Labour Party – and last year of breach of the peace at Edinburgh Airport after being ‘threatenin­g and abusive’.

District Judge Zani said: ‘The evidence against you was overwhelmi­ng and the defence you put forward was lacking in any credibilit­y, particular­ly when one looks at the CCTV evidence and your interpreta­tion of what that demonstrat­ed, I’m afraid, vastly differed from the way I saw the events portrayed.’

He went on: ‘ The events in October 2014 did you no credit. Your reaction to what you perceived was happening in the shop was entirely unacceptab­le.’

The judge told him that he must ensure he avoids violence

He said: ‘I‘m just able in all the circumstan­ces here to suspended the term of imprisonme­nt.

‘I consider that you have dealt with your alcohol problem and you need to focus on dealing with situations where there is a requiremen­t for you not to resort to violence.’

Joyce stood in the dock wearing a dark suit, white shirt and blue tie as the sentence was handed down. In mitigation, Neil Corre had urged the judge to suspend any custodial term because of his efforts to battle his drink problem.

‘This is an intelligen­t, healthy man who has served his country in the armed services and in parliament,’ he said.

‘He understand­s that his previous offending was because he had a drink problem, and it’s in my submission an indication of the strength of his character that he himself has overcome that drink problem through determinat­ion and will power. He is a positive candidate for a suspended sentence.’

After the hearing, Joyce said: ‘I think that is a fair outcome.’

Asked if he felt remorse for his actions, he added: ‘Of course. In the end it was a 14-year- old boy and that is a shame and a cause of considerab­le remorse and I have to both pay the price and make sure I don’t do it again.’

Joyce was ordered to pay £750 prosecutio­n costs, £200 compensati­on to the boy knocked to the floor, £50 to the other boy and an £80 victim surcharge.

 ??  ?? Convicted: But former MP Joyce will be sent to rehab
Convicted: But former MP Joyce will be sent to rehab
 ??  ?? Shop damage : Caused by the fracas
Shop damage : Caused by the fracas

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