The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Drunken ‘Rocky’ lays out homeowner after entering wrong house

Perth: Drunk man mistakenly believed he was fighting off an intruder

- Mark Mackay mmackay@thecourier.co.uk

A drunken 62-year-old tried to clamber into a neighbour’s bed after stumbling into the wrong flat in Perth.

Peter ‘Rocky’ Dunkley barged into the property after a heavy night’s drinking, unaware his own home was doors away, in Stanley Crescent.

He blundered through the flat in an alcohol-induced haze until entering what he thought was his own bedroom, only to wake the stunned occupant.

The incident led to a bizarre standoff in which the two men each attempted to persuade the other it was their home.

It came to an end as Dunkley laid out his victim with a single punch to the head.

The assault left the man bleeding from a cut above his right eye as the accused stumbled off down a darkened set of stairs.

Hours later, as he handed himself in to the police, Dunkley was apparently still under the misapprehe­nsion that he had simply been defending his home from an intruder.

He admitted assaulting the man, but told officers: “I know what happened. He deserved it. I let him have it.”

During his interview, he was asked why he had carried out the assault, but replied: “I’m not willing to say. That is between men.”

Dunkley subsequent­ly admitted behaving in a threatenin­g and abusive manner on September 2 2016 by entering a property uninvited, shouting and swearing, striking the front door with his hands and refusing to leave.

He also admitted assaulting a man by punching him on the head to his injury.

Perth Sheriff Court heard the two men had been former drinking buddies, but it was unclear whether Dunkley appreciate­d that fact during the incident.

Solicitor John McLaughlin said the pair lived just a few doors apart and that “the layout of the flat was identical to that of Mr Dunkley’s property”.

“In the past my client had been robbed,” the agent said.

“He had known people to enter his home and take items

“On this night he was heavily under the influence of alcohol.

“He believed it was his property and that the man had no business being there.”

Mr McLaughlin said Dunkley had resisted the urge to consume alcohol since the incident.

Sheriff Lindsay Foulis fined him £600 and ordered him to pay his victim an additional £200 in compensati­on.

I know what happened. He deserved it. I let him have it. PETER DUNKLEY

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