A Harrogate man has been handed a suspended prison sentence after magistrates told him they were giving him a chance to avoid getting into more trouble.
Aaron Peter Wilson, 44, of Russell Street, appeared at Harrogate Magistrates Court to be sentenced on 16 charges on Friday.
The offences were committed on six separate dates between July 2022 and March this year.
They included six counts of assaulting people by beating them and one of using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour with intent to cause fear of violence.
There were also eight counts of criminal damage, all of which were committed on cars in Harrogate and Knaresborough. The value of the damage caused ranged from £11.85 to £510.
Prosecuting, Alison Whitely told magistrates the victims had often encountered Wilson in the street:
“These people are members of the public minding their own business who have been randomly picked on, either by their property being damaged or being assaulted.”
Ms Whiteley highlighted Wilson’s history, which included 26 previous offences.
She said some of the crimes he was being sentenced for on Friday were committed while he was subject to a community order for a separate offence.
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However, in defence, Martin Townend of Watson Woodhouse Solicitors told the court that most of the offences took place between July and September 2022, with just one incident in March 2023.
He said Wilson had been out of trouble since his last conviction in 2018, a period when he was “in a good state of health”.
He said:
“Mr Wilson has been diagnosed with PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder]. When he was younger, he did some voluntary work in Bosnia when the conflict was in force.
“He saw things in that country that have affected his mental health. When he has flashbacks, he drinks to make those flashbacks stop.”
Drinking problems
Mr Townend said all Wilson’s offending had occurred when he had been drinking. He often then made loud comments in public, such as accusing people of being drug dealers or paedophiles, causing strangers to object, which led him to lash out.
Since the last offence, Mr Townend said Wilson had found work through one local charity and was volunteering with another. He had also joined an organisation offering support with staying sober.
Mr Townend added:
“In the main, he is sticking to not drinking, because he realises the drink is the catalyst for this behaviour… he has started to look at himself, not really like what he has seen, and he has taken steps himself to do something about it.”
The magistrates were given a lengthy report to consider, including psychiatric assessments, before deciding how to sentence Wilson.
For all 16 offences, he was given a total prison sentence of 26 weeks, suspended for 18 months.
He was also ordered to wear an alcohol tag for 120 days, meaning if he drinks during that time he will be made to return to court if he drinks. He must also complete 30 days of rehabilitation activity.
Magistrates imposed a victim surcharge of £154, but did not award costs because of Wilson’s limited means. Nor did they award compensation, saying no invoices had been submitted to account for the value of the damage done to the cars.
Wilson was warned that some of the three magistrates had wanted to send him straight to prison. The suspended sentence, he was told, was a “very serious order” and if he got in any trouble during its term, or failed to comply with the other requirements, he would be jailed.
Harrogate man given suspended sentence for threatening to kill policemanA Harrogate homeless man has been given an 18-week suspended prison sentence for threatening to kill a policeman.
Ryan Hopper, 20, admitted the offence when he appeared before magistrates in Harrogate on Thursday.
Hopper, of Harrogate Homeless Project on Bower Street, threatened the officer on Rudbeck Drive in Harrogate on May 14 this year.
He also pleaded guilty to assaulting the same officer on the same day on Dalby Avenue.
Court documents said he was given a custodial sentence because of his previous record and the fact the offences were committed while he was subject to a community order. He was also fined £240.
However, the prison sentence was suspended for 18 months because there was a “realistic prospect of rehabilitation”, the documents added.
Hopper received a community order on January 5 this year for affray, possessing class B drugs, possessing an offensive weapon and threatening violence on Bower Street.
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Harrogate woman jailed for 10 weeks
A woman from Harrogate has been jailed for 10 weeks for failing to comply with a community order.
Claire Read, 28, of Fairfax Avenue, admitted the offence when she appeared at Harrogate Magistrates Court on Friday.
Read received a suspended sentence, which included a community order, on September 23 last year.
As part of this, she was required to attend an appointment on February 15 but failed to do so.
Court documents say Read was jailed for ‘wilful and persistent failure to comply with the requirements of a community order’.
The documents added her guilty plea was taken into account when the sentence was imposed.
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Suspended sentence for man with knife in Harrogate town centre
A man has received a four-month suspended prison sentence for possessing a knife in Harrogate town centre.
Michael Smith, 32, admitted the offence when he appeared at Harrogate Magistrates Court on Thursday (December 15).
Smith, of Harewood Road, Jennyfields, was charged with having the knife on Cambridge Road on November 8.
His sentence was suspended for 24 months.
Magistrates ordered him to carry out 180 hours of supervised unpaid work within the next 12 months.
Smith was also ordered to pay £114 to victim services and £85 to the Crown Prosecution Service.
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Harrogate care worker steals £30,000 from victim to fund gambling addiction
A Harrogate care worker stole over £30,000 from a woman with schizophrenia and learning disabilities after developing a major gambling habit.
Linda Thornton, 32, worked for Caretech in Harrogate. She transferred money from the victim’s bank account to her own during a nine-month fraud campaign in which she “drained” the woman’s finances to the tune of £33,525, York Crown Court heard.
All the while, Thornton was using the money to fund her online gambling, spending over £100,000 in nine months and losing £22,000.
Prosecutor Elizabeth Muir said the victim had trusted Thornton “above all other (care workers)” and the two women formed a close bond.
One of Thornton’s roles was to look after the financial interests of the named victim, who lived in supported accommodation provided by the care group.
Ms Muir said the victim, who was 46 at the time, had moved into supported accommodation in late 2018, shortly after receiving a benefits back payment of £28,095.
Asked to borrow money
Suspicions arose when another woman receiving care told her support worker that Thornton, formerly of The Crescent, Guiseley, but currently of no fixed address, had asked to borrow money from her. Ms Muir said:
“Linda Thornton pleaded with her to hand her some money and said it would be their little secret.”
The matter was reported to managers at the care group and an investigation began. Meanwhile, Thornton, from Leeds, had taken out a £4,000 loan in the name of another staff member, while also rifling through the victim’s account. Ms Muir said:
“It became clear that (Thornton) had assisted (the victim) in setting up online banking, but also she could access (the victim’s) bank account through her mobile. On one occasion, (the victim’s) bank card was declined because no funds were left in that account.”
The distraught victim went to Thornton for help, not realising it was she who was stealing the money.
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The investigation revealed that between April 2019 and the end of January 2020, Thornton transferred £33,525 from the victim’s bank account to her own.
Ms Muir added that Thornton had paid back just under £15,000 to the victim between May and December 2019.
‘I trusted her’
Following her arrest, Thornton made a full admission to police and said she had “lost track of how much money she had taken”.
She pleaded guilty to fraud and appeared for sentence today following delays to the court case.
In a statement read out in court, the victim said she was very upset and “disappointed” that the woman she trusted had defrauded her:
“I trusted her and thought she would do the right things for me. I was shocked. I had done some nice things for her.”
She said she was worried she wouldn’t be able to pay her bills and no longer trusted people.
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Adam Birkby, mitigating, said although she had “abused a position of trust”, Thornton was “overwhelmed” by debt at the time and had a serious gambling problem.
Thornton “foolishly” imagined she could repay the money to the victim through online gambling, but she “quickly became addicted”.
He said Thornton was “deeply ashamed” of her actions. She had lost her job and her home following her arrest, the relationship with her boyfriend had collapsed and she still had debts.
However, she had since beaten her gambling addiction and had found new work as a manager of a local business.
Suspended sentence
Judge Simon Hickey told Thornton she had “drained” the bank account of a “very vulnerable lady…who trusted you”.
He said it was clear that Thornton had become “trapped” in an “insidious and pernicious” online gambling addiction, was genuinely remorseful and had until the fraud been of “impeccable” character.
“Gambling is what has destroyed your life so far, but you have managed to address that.”
Mr Hickey said that because of the delay in the court case and strong personal mitigation he could suspend the inevitable jail sentence. The 22-month prison sentence was suspended for 18 months.
Thornton was ordered to repay the victim the full £18,593 still outstanding and participate in a 35-day rehabilitation programme.