A drunk 15-year-old who killed a bus driver after he refused to allow him to travel has been jailed for just four years.
Keith Rollinson, 58, died of cardiac arrest after the assault at Elgin bus station on Feb 2. The former RAF employee was attacked by the boy, who is now 16, after he refused to allow him to board the service because he was drunk.
The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, headbutted Rollinson and ârained punchesâ on his head and body after the driver grabbed his mobile phone, which was being used to film him.
Rollinson suffered a cardiac arrest shortly after being attacked and never regained consciousness.
The sentencing follows growing concern about violent disorder on Scotlandâs public transport network, which some have blamed on the SNPâs policy of handing free bus passes to those aged up to 21.
John Swinney, the First Minister, last week vowed to consider what action could be taken against those who abused the perk after a survey by trade union Unite found 84 per cent of bus drivers had experienced abuse over the previous year.
The teenager who killed Rollinson had initially been charged with murder, but later pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of culpable homicide, the Scottish equivalent to manslaughter. He was jailed for four years and four months.
Passing sentence, judge Lady Hood said statements from Rollinsonâs family described him as âa true gentleman with a heart of gold and a wonderful husband and fatherâ.
She said the family âhave been shattered by their lossâ and that due to the circumstances of his death, they had been unable to be with him when he died.
Lady Hood added: âNothing said or done here today, and no sentence I can pass, will ever be enough to help Mr Rollinsonâs family with their devastating loss.â
The teenager, dressed in a white shirt and black trousers, showed no reaction as he was led from the courtroom.
âAttack not intended by accusedâ
Earlier, Shelagh McCall KC, the youthâs lawyer, told the court the attack on Rollinson âwas not intended, nor was it foreseen by the accusedâ.
âThe incident was precipitated by an action on the part of the deceased that appears to have been a trigger,â she said, referring to Rollinsonâs grabbing of the youthâs phone and then stamping on it.
She told the court this reduced her clientâs level of culpability but acknowledged that âthe harm caused was of the highest levelâ.
Ms McCall also said her client understood the seriousness of his actions and that he had shown âsincere remorseâ for it.
Sue Webber, the Scottish Tory transport secretary, said: âThe death of Keith Rollinson was an appalling tragedy, and my thoughts are with his family today.
âFar too many bus drivers are being put in harmâs way and left feeling unsafe at work due to the SNPâs failure to crack down on this behaviour.
âTheir soft-touch attitude means judgesâ hands are being tied due to their sentencing guidelines for younger people, which meant a lighter punishment was handed down simply due to the offenderâs age.
âJohn Swinney must take a tough stance against those who believe it is acceptable to abuse our bus drivers and that should start by imposing restrictions and curfews on those abusing the young personâs bus pass scheme.â
EMEA Tribune is not involved in this news article, it is taken from our partners and or from the News Agencies. Copyright and Credit go to the News Agencies, email news@emeatribune.com Follow our WhatsApp verified Channel