Christopher Bridge wanted to get revenge after an attack on his son
Christopher Bridge wanted to get revenge after an attack on his son
A dad seeking revenge attended a children’s party armed with a hammer. Christopher Bridge wanted to confront an 11-year-old girl about an incident involving his son in a park.
A judge said he had wanted to frighten everyone at the party, while his own own barrister admitted it must have been “very frightening” for those at the property in Prestatyn, Wales. Bridge, 32, admitted affray and two other charges.
Bridge was handed a two-year jail term at Mold Crown Court, suspended for two years. Bridge, who is the sole carer for his son, received a suspended sentence as the judge said a mother in his circumstances would receive the same sentence, reports North Wales Live.
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Prosecutor Laura Knightly told the court Bridge, of Green Avenue, Kinmel Bay, Conwy, went to a house in Prestatyn at 6pm one evening in April. He was looking for an eleven-year-old girl who was a friend of the householder’s daughter.
He believed the girl had been involved in an assault on his young son. Bridge held up a hammer and used it on the front door. Bridge was told children were present and the incident was captured on the doorbell camera. The defendant left and police arrested him later that month.
In an interview he shook his head as allegations were outlined to him and “appeared to smirk”, said the prosecutor. In a victim statement the householder said she was nervous about Bridge coming back to her house.
Another woman at the party said in her statement: “If he can go to a house full of kids with a hammer what else is he capable of?” Defence barrister Brett Williamson said his client behaved shamefully and it had been “very frightening” for the children in the property.
“Mr Bridge discovered that his son had been assaulted by a number of older youngsters in the local park. He has acted out of all sense of reason and proportion when he discovered his son injured.”
Mr Williamson said whatever happened in the park cannot justify or excuse Bridge’s offending. The judge His Honour Niclas Parry said it had been “shameful, cowardly and bullying behaviour – a 32-year-old man seeking vengeance on an eleven-year-old girl?”
He said: “You went to the family home brandishing a hammer…and despite being told there was a primary school [age] children’s party you tried to grab an eleven-year-old child.” He said the young children would have been terrified.
But it had been out of character and he is the sole carer for his son. The judge also noted Bridge has tried to stay in work – in construction – and has lost a lot already due to this case.
The judge said he would have suspended his sentence if it had been a mum in these circumstances and it shouldn’t be any different for a dad. He ordered Bridge to do 250 hours of unpaid work, attend 15 days of rehabilitation activity and pay £750 compensation to the householder.
He also made a three-year restraining order prohibiting the defendant from contacting the householder directly, indirectly or from referring to her on social media, or from going within 100 metres of her home. There were no separate penalties for possession of an offensive weapon in a public place and criminal damage.