Sunderland Echo

Man’s threat to kill hotel guest and receptioni­st

- Gareth Crickmer echo.news@jpimedia.co.uk @sunderland­echo

A man brought 40minutes of fear to the foyer of a plush Sunderland hotel by waving a metal pole and making threats to kill a receptioni­st and a holidaymak­er.

C a l lu m S n owba l l , 23 , grabbed the pole from behind the reception desk of Seaburn’s seafront Grand Hotel after starting an argument with the female employee.

When a woman on vacation who he had just met tried to calm him down, Snowball shouted, “I’m going outside for a tab. If she’s still here when I get back, I’m going to kill her and then I’m going to kill you.”

The offence, on Tuesday, July 21, came days after he had been released from an eightweek stretch for assaulting an emergency worker.

He has now avoided being sent back to prison after being handed a suspended eightweek sentence.

M a g i s t r at e s i n S o u t h Tyneside said it had been a “particular­ly nasty offence” which had clearly passed the custodial threshold.

Chair of the bench Tony Hewison told Snowball: “God knows what these ladies were thinking when you picked up that weapon.”

Prosecutor Lesley Burgess told the court: “The witness wasstaying­attheGrand­Hotel, and was outside speaking to two men who she didn’t know. “One began to argue with a female receptioni­st who was behind the reception desk.

“The witness was trying to diffuse the situation, but the man was acting really aggressive­ly. He said, ‘Are you two

talking about me?’ He was picking up a metal post from behind the desk, and he started waving it around.

“He then said, ‘I’m going outside for a tab, if she’s still here when I get back, I’m going to kill her and then I’m going to kill you.

“She was fearful and called the police. The male then went with his friend to their rooms. The incident lasted about 40 minutes.”

To m M o rga n , d e fe n d - ing, said Snowball had been housed at the hotel by a local

authority. He added: “He is someone with major mental health issues, he suffers from a personalit­y disorder. He had found himself homeless. He wasextreme­lypsycholo­gically unwell.”

Snowball, whose sentence was suspended for a year, admitted to threatenin­g violence.

Snowball, of Bessemer Street, Ferryhill, was given 20 days of rehabilita­tion work with the Probation Service and must pay a £122 victim surcharge and £85 court costs.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Callum Snowball has been given a suspended eight-week sentence at South Tyneside Magistrate­s’ Court.
Callum Snowball has been given a suspended eight-week sentence at South Tyneside Magistrate­s’ Court.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom