A MAN has been jailed after he admitted two violent assaults on police officers.
Jaeron Ling, 28, who lives at Angus Cottages by Friockheim, launched the attacks at a flat in Arbroath High Street last summer.
One of the attacks resulted in the officer’s “severe injury”.
Ling was found guilty of four charges after trial at Dundee Sheriff Court and sentenced to 25 weeks in jail.
He was convicted of assaulting PC Charles Demore by struggling with him and causing him to fall against a door frame, to his injury.
He was also found guilty of assaulting PC Scott Hunter by struggling with him, to his severe injury.
Ling was found guilty of resisting four police officers by struggling violently with them and lashing out with his arms and legs.
He was further found guilty of behaving in a threatening or abusive manner by shouting, swearing, uttering threats of violence and acting abusively towards police officers. All the offences took place on July 13 last year.
Earlier this year, Ling was banned from the roads for 12 months and handed unpaid work after being found guilty of driving at 82mph in a 40mph zone on the A92.
David Hamilton, chairman of the north area committee of the Scottish Police Federation — which represents officers — said: “Any type of violence and aggression towards those charged with upholding the law is utterly unacceptable. These two officers came to their work to protect members of the public, not be attacked and injured by one.
“We welcome this custodial sentence and hope that people realise that an attack on police officers is an attack on society itself.”
Independent Arbroath councillor David Fairweather said that such attacks on officers were unacceptable.
He told the Tele: “I would certainly condemn any incident in which a police officer is assaulted in the line of duty. It absolutely cannot be tolerated.
“I would be hoping that the officers, who were just trying to do a job — for which they are extremely well trained —have made a full recovery and have not suffered lasting damage.
“I’d also hope that the justice handed down from the courts is proportional to the harm inflicted on the officers.”