Actor Stephen Tompkinson found not guilty of GBH

The actor was cleared by a jury at Newcastle Crown Court

Author: Ellie KumarPublished 11th May 2023
Last updated 11th May 2023

Tyneside actor Stephen Tompkinson has been cleared of inflicting GBH on a man he confronted for drunkenly making noise outside his house in Whitley Bay.

He has been on trial at Newcastle Crown Court.

The DCI Banks star was accused of punching Karl Poole in the head after finding him and a friend drinking at the bottom of his driveway in the early hours of May 30 2021.

Mr Poole fell to the ground and broke his skull when his head hit the pavement, the court was told.

Prosecutors claimed Tompkinson "snapped" and "lashed out" at Mr Poole in "disgust" at his behaviour.

But Tompkinson told jurors he only pushed Mr Poole away in self-defence and the contact "wasn't enough to knock a sober man off his feet".

On Thursday, a jury found him not guilty of causing grievous bodily harm after deliberating for just under two hours.

The trial was told Mr Poole and his friend Andrew Hall had been drinking since midnight that bank holiday Sunday and had gone to the beach before passing Tompkinson's home in Whitley Bay, North Tyneside, on the walk back.

Tompkinson, who was living with his partner and her seven-year-old son at the time, heard "strange noises" at around 5.30am.

The 57-year-old called 999 after seeing the pair try to stand up and fall several times while drinking from a bottle of Jagermeister, jurors heard.

While waiting to be connected, Tompkinson went outside wearing pyjamas and a dressing gown and told the "heavily intoxicated" men who he was calling.

Neighbour Caroline Davidson, who was watching from her bedroom window, told the court she saw Tompkinson slap and punch Mr Poole, causing him to stumble and fall backwards, hitting his head on the ground.

Tompkinson said he could not have punched Mr Poole because he was holding his phone.

He told the court the two men "took great objection to me complaining about them being there" and had started to move towards him.

He said he put his hand out to stop Mr Poole coming any further.

"I didn't want to hurt him, I wanted to stop him to change his mind about coming towards me and further on to my property," Tompkinson said.

Tompkinson told the court he has lost acting work since being charged and any association with him in the industry was "on hold" while the legal proceedings were hanging over him.

Stephen Tompkinson nodded but showed no visible emotion when the verdict was announced, while a disappointed sigh could be heard from the public gallery, where complainant Karl Poole was sitting.

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