The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Callum Davidson: The brooding ‘heid chief’ who spoke the language of violence

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The heid chief.

That was the lofty title Callum Davidson gave himself when he punched his number into the mobile phone of friend Colin Chalmers.

That friendship would land his pal in the witness box at the High Court in Edinburgh, explaining how Davidson had rung, looking for someone to “do a turn for him”, on the night of Steven Donaldson’s death.

“When it came up as ‘heid chief’ I knew it was Callum,” he told the jury.

The call was made around the time farmhand Davidson stopped off at his uncle’s house in Kirriemuir to pick up a baseball bat. The makeshift weapon was later snapped across Mr Donaldson’s skull and came to be a critical piece of forensic evidence in the murder case.

Davidson’s fingerprin­t was detected in the victim’s blood which covered the broken shaft.

The same blood also found its way on to the handlebars of a bike which Davidson was seen riding through Kirrie at 2am on June 7, on his way back from Kinnordy Loch, where Mr Donaldson’s brutalised body lay beside his burned out BMW.

Callum Davidson had a reputation as a bully in Kirriemuir, forged through intimidati­on and a fondness for settling disputes with fists and weapons.

His criminal record already listed assault and offensive weapon conviction­s by the time he took his place alongside Steven Dickie and Tasmin Glass in the middle of the Court Three dock.

Brooding Davidson was a contradict­ion to his co-accused; the cocksure, flash lad and well brought up budding singer.

While Glass dabbed her eyes from time to time and waistcoate­d Dickie glanced around the court, acknowledg­ing supporters in the public benches, Davidson sat emotionles­s in his black and white pullover, staring out from under his deep set brow and stifling the rage which had spilled over and snuffed out the life of a stranger at Kinnordy Loch.

From time to time, he furiously scribbled notes to pass to his legal team, presumably in some vain attempt to outwit the minds gathered around the High Court table as the case stacked up against him.

The problem for Callum Davidson was that the QCs and advocates, along with the ladies and gentlemen of the jury, spoke a different language from that of a heid chief.

A language founded on decency, humanity and justice; rather than bullying, brutality and evil.

 ??  ?? Steven Dickie gave a wink and a smile to supporters sitting in the public benches after the jury saw photograph­ic evidence of the murder.
Steven Dickie gave a wink and a smile to supporters sitting in the public benches after the jury saw photograph­ic evidence of the murder.
 ??  ?? Davidson gave himself a lofty title and was known to be a bully.
Davidson gave himself a lofty title and was known to be a bully.

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