The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Duo sent to jail for threatenin­g family

- JAMIE MCKENZIE

Two extortioni­sts have been jailed for threatenin­g to abduct a Fife man’s children, rape his wife and calling an undertaker to collect a child’s body at his home.

Scott Colville and David Mccallum were found guilty of attempting to extort £20,000 from their victim.

The duo, both from Ayr, were also convicted of trying to obtain £5,000 from another man by threatenin­g to assault him and his family.

At Dunfermlin­e Sheriff Court, Sheriff Charles Macnair jailed Mccallum for three years and Colville for two years and nine months.

The court heard Colville had a drugs conviction from 2005 and Mccallum, a self-employed roofer, had a conviction for assault in 2006.

Speaking after the sentencing, one of the victims said: “Justice has prevailed and we’re so glad the jury saw common sense.”

He told The Courier he and his wife were given security locks by police to fit under their door handle and on their letterbox after reporting the threatenin­g phone calls.

His wife said she was given a tracker and still looks over her shoulder in fear when out in the streets.

The couple said at one point they received a phone call from someone at a local funeral director saying they had been told to send a hearse to pick up a child’s body at their address.

They said they received dozens of threatenin­g calls but did not know why they had been targeted.

The woman said: “I did not think they would have been jailed for that long. I was happy they were found guilty

“This has been three years of hell for us.”

Following a four-day trial in October, Colville, 43, and Mccallum, 39, were found guilty of making phone calls to the man, threatenin­g that unless he

paid them £20,000, they would abduct his children and assault him and his family.

The charge stated they had obtained photos of his children and said they would rape his wife and called a funeral director to falsely arrange collection of a child’s body from his address.

The pair were also found guilty of making threatenin­g phone calls to another man, saying unless he paid them £5,000, they would assault him and his family.

The offending took place between July 3 and 8 2019.

A jury deliberate­d for about 45 minutes before returning unanimous guilty verdicts on both charges.

During the trial, the jury heard recordings of phone calls containing the sick threats.

A pair of Fife-based police officers spoke of recovering four mobile phones and a SIM card

from a bin store in Ayr’s Churchill Towers – where Colville was living at the time – as part of their inquiries on July 12 2019.

In his closing submission­s to the jury, fiscal depute Alistair Mcdermid focused on a small Nokia “burner” phone – one of those found by police in the Churchill Towers bin store – which was known to be used in the crime.

A forensic biologist employed by the Scottish Police Authority told the trial that traces of Colville’s and Mccallum’s DNA were found on the buttons.

Mr Mcdermid said the burner was used to phone a taxi firm to book a taxi on July 2 2019.

The fiscal said there were similariti­es in the language used by the person in the taxi calls, specifical­ly use of the word “poppet”, to the language made in one of the calls to a victim.

He also referred to another phone recovered

from Mccallum’s car, which showed a deleted contact for one of the victims.

Mr Mcdermid said: “That, again, is massively incriminat­ing when taken together with the rest of the circumstan­ces in this case”.

Defence advocate Duncan Mcphie, representi­ng Colville, said his client’s last conviction was 14 years ago and that he was given a positive social work report ahead of sentencing, which described him as “low risk”.

The lawyer also said, while not wishing to minimise the crimes, there was “no blood spilled” and that no money was paid or threats carried out.

Mr Mcphie said Colville maintains his denial of involvemen­t in any of the crimes.

The advocate representi­ng Mccallum pointed out the crime was attempted extortion and no money was ever handed over.

 ?? ?? GOING DOWN: Scott Colville and David Mccallum were found guilty of extortion.
GOING DOWN: Scott Colville and David Mccallum were found guilty of extortion.

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