The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Tasmin Glass was key to planning fatal attack, says police investigat­or

Killing would not have happened without ex-girlfriend at its centre

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

The killing of Steven Donaldson would not have happened without Tasmin Glass at its centre, the leader of the police investigat­ion has insisted.

Detective Chief Inspector Andrew Patrick said Glass had “lured” Steven Donaldson to a meeting where Steven Dickie and Callum Davidson attacked him before driving him to the Angus nature reserve where they killed him.

Mr Patrick described how the pair used a baseball bat, a kitchen knife taken from Davidson’s house and a third unidentifi­ed weapon – likely an axe or a spade – to carry out a “sustained” and “frenzied” attack on the 27-year-old.

They initially assaulted Mr Donaldson in Kirriemuir’s Peter Pan playpark through an open car window before taking him to the remote Kinnordy Estate where they delivered the fatal blows.

Glass had not physically assaulted Mr Donaldson, said Mr Patrick, but she was as culpable as Dickie and Davidson for the killing.

“The crime couldn’t have occurred without her facilitati­ng and the other two having planned to get a weapon and physically start assaulting him,” he said.

“In Peter Pan playpark there was a frenzied attack on Steven Donaldson, who wasn’t expecting this to take place.

“He thought he was going to see Tasmin Glass to sort out his relationsh­ip with her, possibly receive some of his belongings, but he was assaulted right from the very start.

“A frenzied attack took place. He was then taken to Kinnordy Estate where the attack continued up until his death.”

Glass told the court she was pregnant with Mr Donaldson’s child. She was also described as being in a sexual relationsh­ip with Dickie.

Mr Patrick said it was likely the love triangle contribute­d to the ferocity of the killing.

“Some of the motivation behind this crime probably arises from the fact that Stephen Dickie was in a relationsh­ip with Tasmin Glass and he was jealous and angry,” he said.

“You can clearly see there are some dynamics among it with Tasmin being pregnant, and she told us that Steven Donaldson was the father.

“If you were Steven Dickie, and you were involved in a relationsh­ip, then perhaps that is the motive.”

He said Glass had been key to planning the attack on Mr Donaldson, whose charred and burned body was found on June 7 last year

“It is always difficult to think why this sort of attack might take place, what goes through people’s minds that would lead them to hatch a plan,” he said.

“But in this case, the fact that Glass got Dickie and Davidson involved – two people who had a history of violence – and not only that but was present when they were sourcing the weapon and trying to get other people involved in the attack, shows that she clearly knew, and they clearly knew, they were going to use weapons to seriously assault somebody.”

He said investigat­ors quickly establishe­d Mr Donaldson had been in a relationsh­ip with Tasmin Glass.

They then gathered background on Dickie and Davidson, discoverin­g they were “best of friends” who were known to the police for “low level violence” and for looking out for one another.

“We looked closely at their background to identify what they may have been involved in, to see if we could build up a history or a background for the kind of people we were dealing with.

“We know they went to primary school together, they went to secondary school together, and ultimately they socialised and drank in one another’s company.

“And over the course of that both of them became involved in lower level violence, which was articulate­d in court as fights outside of licensed premises, and other general assaults.

“In effect, they were two best friends who basically did everything together, drink together, assault people together, and commit grave crimes.”

There are no words which can adequately describe the senselessn­ess and brutality which ended the life of Steven Donaldson.

The deceit and depravity shown by his three killers also know no bounds; from the first seeds of that evil plan sown on the warm night of June 6 2018 to the lies each of these three despicable individual­s continued to tell on High Court of Justiciary oath. It was a final, desperate attempt to evade the justice which will now rightly be meted out by Lord Pentland at the end of this month.

Fate brought together this unlikely cast of killers – two well-known hard men of Kirriemuir with a reputation for trouble and growing criminal records, alongside a teenager with talent from the right side of the tracks.

In the final stages of the trial, the phrase criminal enterprise featured prominentl­y as Crown prosecutor Ashley Edwards placed the pieces of the picture before the jury, revealing the true version of the horror which unfolded.

Steven Donaldson’s killing was a series of events which spiralled out of control.

A row over a relationsh­ip prompted a plan to give an entirely innocent man “a hiding” and culminated in bloody and battered Steven Donaldson fighting for his life against two maniacal best pals in a frenzy of violence.

Three months pregnant with her ex-boyfriend’s baby, Tasmin Glass lied to Steven Donaldson throughout the entire day before he met his brutal end, falsely telling him she was in Glasgow.

Eventually, and well into the evening after swimming in an Angus river with new boyfriend Dickie, farmhand Davidson and his girlfriend Claire Ogston, she told him: “Meet me at the hill or not at all.”

Armed with the baseball bat which would prove one of the key forensic elements of the circumstan­tial case, the two men jumped their victim, but gave completely different versions of how the following events unfolded.

The jury’s verdicts confirmed they saw through the lies of the contemptib­le triumvirat­e, Dickie and Davidson pointing the finger at each other and Glass denying even being at the car park where her two co-accused and an independen­t witness had placed her.

There are still questions surroundin­g the crime which might never be answered, including the weapon which delivered the fatal blow and where it was discarded.

A pathologis­t said the severity of the wounds to the back of Steven Donaldson’s head and neck were the result of sharp force trauma with a heavy bladed weapon such as a machete, sword or axe.

Jurors were invited to believe the killing weapon could have been collected from Davidson’s truck as the trio drove through Kirriemuir, but if that was the case it was another secret all three were prepared to lie about.

The final, terrible sequence of events at Kinnordy Loch is also likely to remain shrouded in deceit, including who set fire to the white BMW which burned so fiercely it collapsed on to the body of its owner after he was dragged under it.

Mercifully, the trio of figures in this darkest of events are each now facing years in a prison cell for what happened to Steven Donaldson.

It is a night that will forever remain etched in the memory of communitie­s at opposite ends of Angus.

However, it was the last act of this grimmest of tragedies which most deserves the attention and focus of the people of Angus and beyond.

Huddled together in grief which has not lifted since their hearts first broke on Thursday June 7 2018, the Donaldson family bravely faced the waiting media while their statement was read by the investigat­ion’s senior detective, Chief Inspector Andy Patrick.

Bill and Pam Donaldson, along with Steven’s sisters Lori and Nicola, had sat through the entire court proceeding­s.

Some moments, such as the horrific, but necessary presentati­on to the jury of the graphic images of their son’s hacked and burned corpse, proved too much to bear.

But they endured the horror of hearing how his hands were razored by defence wounds as he fought to protect himself in the car park at Kinnordy Loch, the trail of his blood stretching across it as he made a final, vain, attempt to escape Dickie and Davidson, and the sight of their deceased son lying beside the BMW car which had been his pride and joy.

Their dignity, decency and devotion to Steven’s memory presented the sharpest contrast imaginable to the behaviour of the three people who took their loved one’s life away.

They paid tribute in their statement to the Police Scotland major investigat­ion team and all those who helped secure justice for Steven.

They also thanked the wider community of Angus whose revulsion over the killing has now been matched by the sense of relief that those behind it have been held to account.

The turnout at Steven’s funeral, and the floral tributes which continue to be laid at his grave and alongside the Kinnordy Loch oak tree planted in his memory, speaks eloquently of the love in which the successful, happy and popular young man was held.

There will be a final return to the High Court for the family on May 30.

On that day, the Donaldson family will finally see the three people who stole their loved one away face justice for the lies and savagery which shocked Angus as the dawn of a June morning broke to reveal a scene of incomprehe­nsible horror.

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: Paul Reid. ?? Police attend the scene of the crime at Loch of Kinnordy nature reserve.
Picture: Paul Reid. Police attend the scene of the crime at Loch of Kinnordy nature reserve.
 ??  ?? COMMENT GRAHAM BROWN CHIEF REPORTER
COMMENT GRAHAM BROWN CHIEF REPORTER

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom