A person who stripped, ran onto a cricket floor and hit a safety guard in entrance of 36,000 followers at a New Year’s Eve match has informed a court docket he’d had “too much to drink” earlier than his offending.
On Monday, Lawrence Joseph Johnstone, 40, confronted the Adelaide Magistrates Court charged with one rely of coming into a recreation floor with out authorisation following the incident on the 2022 New Year’s Eve BBL match at Adelaide Oval.
The court docket was informed Johnstone had jumped a fence and onto the sector inside Adelaide Oval however was shortly apprehended by safety guards and wrestled to the bottom.
“As security tried to remove him, he broke free from restraints and hit a security guard in the face,” prosecution counsel stated.
She stated Johnstone “did not cause the security guard any injury”.
“They were able to remove him from the grounds and handed him over to police.
“The CCTV footage shows he was not formally interviewed due to being moderately affected by alcohol; however, he was apologetic and admitted he shouldn’t have jumped onto the field during the game.”
Johnstone informed the court docket he was sorry for his actions, which had been fuelled by an evening of ingesting.
“It was very embarrassing what happened,” Johnstone stated.
“Too many drinks on the day.”
Magistrate Simon Smart agreed that Johnstone had seemingly had “too much to drink” and been “egged on by friends” earlier than he eliminated his shirt and jumped onto the pitch on the night of December 31, 2022.
In a press release after the incident, an Adelaide Oval spokesperson stated anybody arrested for coming into the taking part in discipline confronted a minimal three-year ban below their code of conduct.
“As such, this individual will now be banned from the stadium in addition to any other penalties issues by SAPOL or the SA courts,” the spokesperson stated.
Johnstone’s penalty had he not pleaded responsible would have been $750, Mr Smart stated, nonetheless for his early request for forgiveness he was ordered to pay a $400 tremendous and an additional $150 to cowl court docket prices.
Source: www.news.com.au