Son of Fraserburgh fire victim arrested trying to save his father

David Graham says he was trying to rescue his dad Gordon

Published 4th Aug 2017

The son of an alleged murder victim was arrested when he tried to evade a police cordon and run into a burning building to rescue his father, a court was told.

David Graham, 36, told a murder trial he was at a house in Marconi Road, Fraserburgh, in the early hours of May 3, 1998, when he heard that the family home was ablaze.

He told prosecutor Jim Keegan QC: “I ran down towards the flat. I saw smoke billowing out the top.

“I tried to get inside the flat.”

Mr Keegan asked Mr Graham: “Were you prevented from doing so?” and he replied: “Yes by the police and firemen. They arrested me"

Mr Graham, unemployed from Fraserburgh, was giving evidence at the trial of Barry Henderson, 42, who denies attempting to murder Anne Graham and murdering her 43-year-old husband by torching their Fraserburgh home.

The High Court in Glasgow has heard the family rented two flats at 74b and 74c High Street, Fraserburgh.

When Mr Graham had been drinking he would sleep in the upper flat, while his wife slept in the lower flat.

Mrs Graham woke up to find her flat engulfed in choking smoke and she escaped by jumping onto the roof of a police van.

Her son David told the jury that he and his two brothers Dean and James assaulted murder accused Henderson earlier that night in a takeaway shop called Sugar and Spice because he had made a rude remark about their mother.

The attack took place just before 11pm.

Mr Graham told the court: “He said either ‘is your mother still cheap’ or ‘is your mother still easy.’

“He made the remark to my brother Dean who told us. A fight ensued. It just erupted.Barry Henderson was getting kicked and punched.”

Mr Keegan asked: “Was he injured?” and Mr Graham replied: “Not terribly, but enough for what he had said.

“Me and my brothers started it throwing punches. He couldn’t do nothing because he was pinned down and being hit.”

Mr Graham said the incident ended in the street with Henderson lying on the ground getting kicked.”

He was then shown a police statement he had made shortly after the fatal fire in which he stated a man called Jonathan Slater, had walked past their flat a few months previously and shouted up he was going to petrol bomb it.

When asked about this Mr Graham said he couldn’t remember it and did not know anyone called Jonathan Slater.

Brian McConnachie QC, defending, today/yesterday quizzed Mr Graham on this individual.

The witness claimed he knew “absolutely nothing” of Slater.

Mr McConnachie: “So, if Jonathan Slater was sitting in this court, you could not pick him out?”

Mr Graham: “No. I know of the name.”

The QC: “How could you tell police Jonathan Slater was walking past if you don't know who he was?”

The witness: “I don't recall saying that.”

Mr McConnachie asked why Mr Graham was “trying to protect” Slater.

But, he replied: “I am no...I don't even know this person.”

Henderson is also accused of assaulting a woman in a nightclub in Fraserburgh, by kicking her on the leg and attempting to punch her, and of committing a breach of the peace at a nearby car park on May 3, 1998.

He also faces another charge that he behaved in a threatening manner on a bus between Crimond and Fraserburgh last November.

Henderson denies all the charges against him and has lodged special defences of alibi and incrimination.

The trial before Lord Ericht continues