The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Violent mum collapses in the dock as she is jailed for abuse

- GORDON CURRIE

APerth mother who carried out a 20-year campaign of violent abuse against her daughters collapsed in the dock as she was jailed for two years.

The 64-year-old laughed as she broke her daughter’s arm by hurling her against a wall and refused to take her to hospital because she was watching soap operas on television, Perth Sheriff Court heard.

The unrepentan­t pensioner claimed she only abused the girls because she had a difficult childhood herself, and complained “I’ll lose my home” after being told she was being sent to prison.

Sheriff William Wood told her: “You knew fine well the way you were dealing with your daughters was wrong and not something you wished to do in front of other people.

“I have to take account of the injuries caused. It is fair to say children who are treated this way will not be unscarred. This conduct took place over a period of some 20 years.

“These girls must have been terrified at times to return home. This conduct was reprehensi­ble as they were entitled to look to you for love, support and protection.”

The sheriff added: “The scale and duration of the misconduct on your part requires a custodial sentence to be imposed.

“I hope you take the time to reflect on the effect of your conduct on your daughters.”

The woman’s own solicitor said she had been responsibl­e for a “horrendous catalogue” of behaviour towards her daughters over two decades.

The court was told that the woman battered a toddler for squeezing the

toothpaste from the middle of the tube in one incident.

She broke her daughter’s arm by picking her up by the ankles and swinging her round before launching her approximat­ely 10 feet across a room.

Fiscal depute Stewart Hamilton said: “She grabbed hold of the complainer and turned her upside down. She swung her from side to side, laughing as she did this.

“This lasted approximat­ely 10 seconds before she threw her two to

three metres across the room. She crash-landed on her right arm and bashed her head off a coffee table.

“She immediatel­y felt pain in her arm, describing it as agony. She was howling in pain. She refused to take her to hospital, saying she wanted to watch her TV programmes first.

“A few hours later she was taken to the hospital. X-rays showed a fractured right arm.”

The court was told the girl was too scared to tell medical staff the truth.

Solicitor David Sinclair, defending, said his client denied waiting to watch “soap operas” and said she wanted time to consider what she should do.

The woman also smashed up her daughters’ room as they slept and caused one of the children to cut her feet walking across broken glass.

The two victims are now in their early 30s and mid20s. The court was told that when she was arrested last year, the mother told police: “Everyone lashes out sometimes. I love my girls.”

Mr Sinclair said: “It is a situation where it has been perpetrate­d through the generation­s.”

The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, admitted striking her older daughter with a belt, pulling her hair and hitting her face on various occasions from 1991 until 2001.

She also admitted attacking and severely injuring her younger daughter from her birth in the mid-1990s until 2011.

She admitted holding her upside down, shaking her, hitting her head and body and throwing her across a room.

She admitted culpably and recklessly smashing up a bedroom in 2002 and injuring the younger girl by making her walk across the broken glass.

The younger sibling said her first memory was of being three years old and being slapped as a “life lesson” to teach her not to hit people.

The court heard that one girl began to fight back in her teens and eventually the sisters revealed the full catalogue of abuse to their mother’s ex-partner. It was 2020 before the full story was reported to police.

 ?? ?? The 64-year-old pled guilty at Perth Sheriff Court.
The 64-year-old pled guilty at Perth Sheriff Court.

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