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Not proven verdict for couple accused of torching car in Perth

Fire crews rushed to tackle the blaze in Nimmo Place in the
early hours of May 15.
Fire crews rushed to tackle the blaze in Nimmo Place in the early hours of May 15.

A woman said to have been seen driving off from the scene of a blaze with a soot-stained bottle of white spirit has been cleared of firebombing her ex-partner’s car.

Bernadette Adams, 38, and her new partner David Taylor, 27, were spotted leaving the scene and were both found with traces of white spirit on their hands.

David Elliot’s car was destroyed in the blaze but Sheriff Lindsay Foulis found the charge of wilful fireraising against Adams and Taylor not proven at Perth Sheriff Court.

Their solicitors told a trial that there was no direct link to prove the accelerant had been used in the blaze or that either party had been involved.

Mr Elliot said he and Adams had an acrimonious relationship and told the trial: “My partner woke me up and said she heard a bang. I walked to the front door and saw an orange glow.

“When I opened the front door I saw my car in flames and, because of the heat from it, I couldn’t get out the front door.

“It was popping and exploding.

“It was well ablaze. You could tell the heat from it was intense. Within three minutes the whole of the car was a ball of flames.

“I got a fright so I ran back into the house. I had to chap the neighbours up to get them out.

“As I looked up the street I saw my ex-partner’s car driving away from the scene.

“I saw it for about 15 seconds. I shouted to the police and fire brigade that I had seen my ex-partner’s car. Maybe she wanted a good look at what she had done.

“I don’t know if the window had been smashed in and an accelerant put in from there. The car didn’t catch fire by itself.

“The car was a burnt-out charred mess. Some sort of fuel or something had been put on it.”

The court was told that a three-quarter full bottle of white spirit was found in the couple’s car and it appeared to be covered in soot.

However, Sheriff Foulis rejected the Crown’s case that the circumstantial evidence was enough to establish the couple had started the blaze.

Adams did plead guilty to other charges arising from the incident.

She admitted neglecting two youngsters at an address in Aberuthven, on May 15 while she was reportedly 12 miles away in Perth.

Adams admitted exposing them to unnecessary suffering or injury.

She admitted leaving them in a house with clothes piled up on the floor, dangerous medicine within their reach, and exposed to a cat litter tray overflowing with excrement.

The charge stated she had left them in the care of a teenager.

Adams also admitted acting in a threatening or abusive manner towards Mr Elliot on December 15.

Sentence was deferred for six months for good behaviour.

In 2010, a group of Scotland’s leading Catholic priests won a legal bid to have Adams thrown out of a rental property owned by the church and pay them £4,000.

Five years earlier, when she was 25, Adams married a man who was in his late 70s.

Friends of the pensioner, who inherited several hundred thousand pounds from his brother, stepped in and enlisted lawyers to bring the marriage to an end.

In 2006, Adams was convicted of frightening her elderly husband by threatening to have his dog killed and demanding that he hand cash over to her.