We use some essential cookies to make our website work. We’d like to set additional cookies so we can remember your preferences and understand how you use our site.
You can manage your preferences and cookie settings at any time by clicking on “Customise Cookies” below. For more information on how we use cookies, please see our Cookies notice.
Your cookie preferences have been saved. You can update your cookie settings at any time on the cookies page.
Your cookie preferences have been saved. You can update your cookie settings at any time on the cookies page.
Sorry, there was a technical problem. Please try again.
This site is a beta, which means it's a work in progress and we'll be adding more to it over the next few weeks. Your feedback helps us make things better, so please let us know what you think.
A drug user who attacked his friend with a metal pole at an address he had been allowed to stay in as a kind gesture has been jailed.
Thomas McKellar, 33, and the victim were at the house of multiple occupancy (HMO) in Cambridge on December 10 when the assault took place.
The victim had allowed McKellar, of no fixed address, to stay with him until he had found his own place.
Both men had finished work begun drinking and taking Ketamine.
It is not known exactly what happened, but McKellar admitted assaulting his friend with a metal pole - leaving him with a fractured nose, a fractured rib and a large cut to his head which had to be glued.
McKellar handed himself in at Parkside Police Station on Christmas Day. Officers found a knuckle duster and a joint of cannabis among his belongings at the scene of the attack.
McKellar pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm (ABH), possessing cannabis and possessing an offensive weapon and was jailed for one year and one month at Peterborough Crown Court on Friday (28 February).
Detective Sergeant Dominic Carminati said: “This was a savage attack in which McKellar targeted his own friend who had done him a favour by allowing him to stay in his home when he was down on his luck.
“I hope McKellar’s time behind bars allows him to reflect on his behaviour and gives some level of closure for his victim.”